Elected Officers

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The elected officers of The Augustan Society, Inc., include both senior officers, who must be Directors, and junior officers who do not have such a restriction:


Senior Corporate Officers

These offices are created by the By-Laws. The office of Chairman is optinal, and need not be filled. All are elected annually at the first Board meeting following the Annual Membership Meeting.


Junior Officers

These offices are created each year by an act of the Board; they are not required in the By-Laws. It has been tradition since 2007 that these two offices are held by the two Consuls, but with the upcoming termination of the office of Consuls, greater flexibility will be available.

It is customary that the Secretary will nominate the Assistant Secretary and that the Treasurer will nominate the other two.


Other Elected Officers

The Magister Rosae is elected each year by the Noble Company of the Rose (and confirmed by the Board). Membership in good standing in both the Society and the Noble Company is required.


Executive Director

A proposal has been discussed to create the office of Executive Director. This officer would be elected by the Board and serve at their pleasure. It could be a paid position. When the office is filled, the Executive Director would have all powers of the Board except his own hiring, compensation, and amending the By-Laws.

There are two motivations for creating this office.

  1. This was the de facto structure of the Society under our Founder, and many feel that concentrating authority in a single individual is the best approach for an organization like ours.
  2. The Society has of late had trouble finding enough members to serve on the Board, and enough Directors to serve as Officers. Thus one adjunct proposal is to automatically create the office of Executive Director whenever the Board cannot muster enough members to obtain a quorum or enough volunteers to serve as the four primary Officers.

The primary drawback to this option is fairly obvious: the wrong person in office could lead to the failure of the Society. There is also the challenge of finding (and adequately compensating) a qualified individual.

It is not clear if this is a worthy experiment, and it has not yet been formally proposed to the Board or membership. It would require a vote of the Membership to adopt.