List of Masonic buildings in the United States
{{Short description|none}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2024}}
{{for|world-wide comparables|List of Masonic buildings}}
List of Masonic buildings in the United States identifies notable Masonic buildings in the United States. These have served as meeting halls by Masonic lodges, Grand Lodges or other Masonic bodies. Many of the buildings were built to house Masonic meetings and ritual activities in their upper floors, and to provide commercial space below. In small towns, these were frequently the grandest and tallest buildings. Many of the buildings listed have received landmark status, either by being listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) or listed by various State or City preservation agencies.
In 2021, more than 400 Masonic buildings are listed here.
{{GeoGroup}}
{{Horizontal TOC|nonum=y}}
{{clear}}
{{anchor|key}}
KEY
class="wikitable" |
{{NRHP color}}|
|Individually NRHP-listed |
---|
{{HD color}}|
|NRHP-listed historic district |
{{CP color}}|
|Contributing property in NRHP-listed historic district |
|
|Unlisted |
{{clear}}
States
=Alabama=
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Alabama|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Alabama)
=Alaska=
=Arizona=
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Arizona|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Arizona)
=Arkansas=
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Arkansas|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Arkansas)
=California=
Masons in California grew from 258 members in 1850 to over 63,000 in 1918, declining to 46,000 in 2019.https://lodge46.freemason.org/2020/02/06/masonic-membership-over-the-past-century/ Specifically 258 (1850), to 63,979 (1918) to 46,443 (2019).
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 1 | Masonic Temple and Lodge (Alameda, California) | 125px | 1890 built | 1329-31 Park St. and 2312 Alameda Ave. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 2 | Auburn Masonic Temple (Auburn, California) | 125px | 1914-1915 built | 948 Lincoln Way |
121.07088|source:Doncram|name=Auburn Masonic Temple}}
| Beaux-Arts style, built in 1914–1915 |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 3 | Old Masonic Hall (Benicia, California) | 125px | 1850 built | 106 W. J St. | The oldest purpose built Masonic Hall in California. The building was sold by the Masons in 1887, but was reacquired and refurbished for Masonic use in 1950. NRHP-listed |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 4 | Masonic Temple (Berkeley, California) | 125px | 1905 built | 2105 Bancroft Way and 2295 Shattuck Ave. | Classical Revival style, built in 1905. The upper floors were later used by University of California, Berkeley. |
-
! {{HD color}}| 5 | Masonic Temple (Ferndale, California) | 125px | 1891 built | 212 Francis | Eastlake-Stick architecture built in 1891. It is used as a Masonic Hall.{{Cite web |year=2011 |title=Main Street Walk, Ferndale, California |url=http://www.ferndale-museum.org/mainstreet.htm |access-date=12 December 2011 |publisher=Ferndale Museum |archive-date=1 January 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120101043324/http://ferndale-museum.org/mainstreet.htm |url-status=dead }} Contributing building in NRHP-listed Ferndale Main Street Historic District |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 6 | Masonic Temple (Fullerton, California) | 125px | 1920 built | 501 N. Harbor Blvd. | Built in Mission/Spanish Revival style. This was the second Masonic meeting hall in Fullerton. Due to declining membership and rising costs, the Masons sold the building in 1993, and it has been converted into the Spring Field Banquet Center, a commercial banquet hall and reception center.{{Cite web |title=City of Fullerton, Community Development website |url=http://www.ci.fullerton.ca.us/depts/dev_serv/planning_/historic_fullerton/1918_1925_non_residential/masonic_temple.asp |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150923203220/http://www.ci.fullerton.ca.us/depts/dev_serv/planning_/historic_fullerton/1918_1925_non_residential/masonic_temple.asp |archive-date=2015-09-23 |access-date=2018-06-03}} |
-
! {{NRHP color}} | {{small|7}} | 125px | 1882 built | 201 4th St., | coordinates = {{coord|38|15|13|N|121|21|42|W|name=Brewster Building}} | Italianate commercial originally with Masonic group upstairs. |
-
! {{HD color}}| {{small|8}} | 125px | c.1908 built | 355 San Benito St. | Prominent contributing building in Downtown Hollister Historic District, with a domed cupola. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| {{small|9}} | Hornitos Masonic Hall No. 98 | 125px | 1855 built | 2877 Bear Valley Rd. | Mid 19th Century Revival style During the first twenty years of its existence, the building served many different purposes, operating as a photography studio, a jewelry and watch store, tailor shop and finally as the Fashion Saloon. It was purchased by Masons in August 1873 for $220, and they renovated it for use as a Masonic Hall. Sometime in early 1875, the Masons began holding regular meetings in the building and have occupied it ever since.[http://www.hornitos98.org/about%20us.html Hornitos Lodge No. 98 - About us] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120324231236/http://www.hornitos98.org/about%20us.html |date=2012-03-24 }} |
-
! | {{small|10}} | Masonic Temple (Long Beach, California) | | 1903 built | 230 Pine Ave. | Listed on the List of City of Long Beach historic landmarks{{Cite web |url=http://www.lbds.info/planning/historic_preservation/historic_landmarks.asp |title=City of Long Beach Historic Landmarks |access-date=2018-06-03 |archive-date=2011-07-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721220249/http://www.lbds.info/planning/historic_preservation/historic_landmarks.asp |url-status=dead }}{{Cite web |title=City of Long Beach page for Masonic Temple |url=http://www.longbeach.gov/civica/filebank/blobdload.asp?BlobID=12036 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061006102051/http://www.longbeach.gov/civica/filebank/blobdload.asp?BlobID=12036 |archive-date=2006-10-06 |access-date=2018-06-03}} It is "one of the last remaining examples of eminent local architect Henry Starbuck, who designed many of the city's turn-of-the-century buildings." It was renovated and restored in the 1980s, and was remodelled in the 1990s for use by Z Gallerie, a store.{{Cite web |title=Masonic Temple |url=http://www.longbeach.gov/civica/filebank/blobdload.asp?BlobID=12036 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061006102051/http://www.longbeach.gov/civica/filebank/blobdload.asp?BlobID=12036 |archive-date=2006-10-06 |access-date=2018-06-03 |publisher=Long Beach}} |
-
! | {{small|11}} | Masonic Temple (Marysville, California) | | 1864 dedicated | N.E. corner of Third and East Streets | |
-
! | {{small|12}} | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Long Beach, California) | 125px | 1926 built | 855 Elm Ave. | Romanesque Revival; a Long Beach Historic Landmark |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| {{small|13}} | 125px | 1921 built | 6840 Hollywood Blvd., in Hollywood neighborhood | John C. Austin-designed, Classical Revival style |
-
!{{NRHP color}} | 12 | Highland Park Masonic Temple | 125px | 19__ built | 104 N. Avenue 56, in Highland Park neighborhood |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 13 | 125px | 19__ built | 1050 E. 50th St., South Los Angeles | |
-
! | 14 | Scottish Rite Masonic Temple (Los Angeles) | 125px | | Wilshire Boulevard | Scottish Rite Masonic Temple Los Angeles. Later became the Marciano Art Foundation Pavilions.Marciano Art Foundation and [https://www.laconservancy.org/issues/scottish-rite-masonic-temple] |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 15 | 125px | 1925 built | 665 W. Jefferson Blvd. | Moorish Revival style; built by Al Malaikah Temple of the Ancient Arabic Order of Mystics of the Noble Shrine. |
-
! {{HD color}}| 16 | Masonic Hall (Mendocino, California) | 125px | 1866 built | 10500 Lansing Street | Built of redwood, including a unique redwood sculpture crowning its cupola |
-
! | 17 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Pasadena, California) | 125px | 1925 built | 150 N. Madison Ave. |
118.13804|source:Doncram|name=Scottish Rite Cathedral (Pasadena, California)}}-->
| Deemed NRHP-eligible but not NRHP-listed |
-
! {{HD color}}| 18 | Masonic Building | | 1882 built | 43-49 Petaluma Blvd. N., 7/9 Western Ave. |
122.64047|source:Doncram|name=Masonic Building (Petaluma, California)}}
| Brick building with cast iron detailing, Italianate in style, included in Petaluma Historic Commercial District.{{Cite web |last=Donald S. Napoli |date=November 2, 1994 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Petaluma Historic Commercial District |url={{NRHP url|id=95000354}} |access-date=January 19, 2021 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=95000354|photos=y|title=accompanying 18 photos}} |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 19 | Masonic Temple (Riverside, California) | | 1908 built | 3650 11th St. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 20 | 125px | 1920 built | 1131 J St. |
-
! | 21 | 125px | 1958 built | 1111 California Street | Albert Roller-designed |
-
! | 22 | Scottish Rite Masonic Center (San Francisco, California) | | | 2850 19th Avenue |
122.47473|source:Doncram|name=Scottish Rite Masonic Center (San Francisco, California)}}
| |
id="Texas Lodge"
! | 23 | Texas Lodge Masonic Hall | 125px | 1869 built | CA-299 |
122.49100|name=Shasta Masonic Hall}}
| San Juan Bautista, California | Texas Lodge No. 46 F. & A. M. was founded by Edward Farris Storey and first met in 1854.{{Cite web |last=Truitt L. Bradly |date=2019 |title=The Texan Influence: The Formation of California's Texas Lodge No. 46 |url=https://lodge46.freemason.org/2019/05/15/history-of-texas-lodge-no-46-of-san-juan-bautista-california/}}{{Cite web |title=About |url=https://lodge46.freemason.org/#about |publisher=Texas Lodge No. 46}} |
{{HD color}}| 24
| Shasta Masonic Hall, or Western Star Lodge No. 2 - F & A.M. | 125px | | CA-299 |
---|
122.49100|name=Shasta Masonic Hall}}
| Two-story brick building, included in NRHP-listed Shasta State Historic Park.{{Cite web |last=Allen W. Welts |date=March 23, 1970 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Shasta State Historic Park |url={{NRHP url|id=71000199}} |access-date=December 14, 2020 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=71000199|photos=y|title=accompanying seven photos from c.1952 to 1965}} |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 25 | 125px | 1855 built | 623 Main St. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 26 | 1980 NRHP-listed | 3rd and C Sts. | Tehama | |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 27 | Masonic Temple-Naval Lodge No. 87, Free and Accepted Masons | 125px | 1918 built | Marin & Virginia Sts. | Maybe also called "Vallejo Masonic Temple"? (this table entry was changed from NRHP name, "Masonic Temple-Naval Lodge No. 87, Free and Accepted Masons". Now Temple Art Lofts? |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 28 | 125px | 1898 built | 400 Front St. | Classical Revival style. Until 1948 the upper floor meeting rooms were used jointly by the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and the Freemasons. In 1948 the Masons bought out the Odd Fellows.{{NRHP url|id=93001396|title=NRHP nomination document}} |
-
! | 29 | 125px | 1898 built | 371 Windsor River Road |
122.816315|name=Windsor Masonic Temple}}
| Burned in 1905, severely damaged in 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Now a Windsor historical landmark. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 30 | Woodbridge Masonic Lodge No. 131 | 125px | 1882 built | 1040 Augusta St. |
-
! | 31 | Ionic_Composite_Lodge_No._520#The Lodge Building|Ionic Masonic Center | 125px | 1950 built | 1122 South La Cienega Blvd. | |
-
! | 32 | File:Elysian Masonic Temple.jpg | Opened 1959 | 1900 N. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90027 | Home to the [https://www.elysianmasons.org Elysian Masonic Lodge #418 F&AM], Elysian Masonic Temple is a 13,000 square foot building situated on about an acre of land in the heart of Los Angeles in the Los Feliz neighborhood. Opened in 1959 [https://www.elysianmasons.org] |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in California|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in California)
=Colorado=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1887 built | {{coord|37.46799 |
105.86685|name=Alamosa Masonic Hall}} |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1925 built | |
105.2029|name=Colorado Consistory No. 1}}
| Consistory located near the state capitol in downtown Denver |
-
! | 3 | First National Bank of Douglas County | 125px | 1904 built | 300 Wilcox St. |
104.85974|name=First National Bank of Douglas County}}
| Also known as Masonic Building, designed George Louis Bettcher |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 4 | Masonic Temple Building (Denver, Colorado) | 125px | 1889 built | 1614 Welton St. | Richardsonian Romanesque style building from 1889 |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 5 | 125px | 1905 built | 3220 Federal Blvd. | Classical Revival Sold by the Masons in 1927 and now privately owned. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 6 | Mosque of the El Jebel Shrine | 125px | 1907 built | 1770 Sherman St. | Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals, Moorish Revival;Egyptian Revival Originally constructed as a meeting hall for the Shriners, it was sold it to the Scottish Rite in 1924. In 1995 it was sold again, and was operated for a time as an events center. |
-
! | 7 | 125px | 1903 built | Oak and Howes Streets | Designed by William N. Bowman{{Cite web |last=Meg Dunn |date=May 24, 2016 |title=A Tour of the Masonic Temple in Fort Collins |url=https://www.northerncoloradohistory.com/masonic-temple-fort-collins/ |access-date=July 25, 2019}} |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 8 | 125px | 1927 built | 829 10th Ave. | Colonial Revival building |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 9 | American Federation of Human Rights Headquarters | 125px | 1924 built | 9070 S. Douglas Blvd. | Co-Masonry building associated with Italian-Americans and, egads, women! |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 10 | Montrose Masonic Temple, Lodge No. 63 | 125px | 1911 built | 509-513 E. Main St. |
-
! | 11 | 125px | 1861 built | 1043 Nevadaville Road | Western Neoclassical architecture building, serving as Colorado's only ghost town Masonic lodge |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 12 | Mechanics Building/Masonic Building | 125px | 1891 built | 207-211 N. Main St. | A Late Victorian building from 1891 |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 13 | 125px | 1889 built | location = 281 W. 7th Ave. | Former schoolhouse taken over by Masons in early 1920s. |
-
!| 14 | 125px | 1911 built | location = 132 E. Main St. |
104.50487|name=Masonic Temple (Trinidad, Colorado)}}
| Also known as Colorado Building, included in Corazon de Trinidad, NRHP-listed in 1973.{{Cite report |url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/84131477 |title=Colorado SP Corazon de Trinidad |publisher=National Archives |access-date=April 17, 2021 |type=none}} 170-page PDF ({{NationalArchivesNote}}) |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Colorado|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Colorado)
=Connecticut=
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Connecticut|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Connecticut)
=Delaware=
=Florida=
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Florida|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Florida)
=Georgia=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1940 built | 330 Auburn Avenue | Headquarters of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in the 1960s. contributing in the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park |
| 2
| 125px | 1920 built | 20 West Main St. | A two-story brick building with a parapet; it has limestone Art Deco elements at corners and in the beltcourse. It is the meeting hall for Fickling Lodge #129 F&AM, and a contributing building in Butler Downtown Historic District.{{Cite web |last=Holly L. Anderson, Megan Eades and Brian Eades |date=November 19, 2004 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Butler Downtown Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=04001466}} |access-date=September 26, 2016 |publisher=National Park Service}} with Masonic Lodge depicted in 16th of {{NRHP url|id=04001466|photos=y|title=18 accompanying photos}} |
---|
| 3
| Chickamauga Lodge No. 221, Free and Accepted Masons, Prince Hall Affiliate | 125px | 1924 built | Near to Chickamauga |
-
! | 4 | Columbian Lodge No. 7 Free and Accepted Masons | | 1902 built | 101 12th St. | Sullivanesque, Chicago style building designed by T. Firth Lockwood. |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Lodge (Cordele, Georgia) | 125px | 1907 built | {{coord|31|58|05.05|N|83|46|57.84|W|source:CommonsCoordinates|name=Masonic Lodge (Cordele, Georgia)}} | Designed by T. Firth Lockwood, Sr., and included in Cordele Commercial Historic District. |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1915 built | 600 S. Hamilton St. | NRHP-listed Home of Dalton Lodge No. 238, Prince Hall Affiliation. |
-
! | 7 | Pythagoras Lodge No. 41, Free and Accepted Masons | 125px | 1924 built | 136 E. Ponce de Leon Ave. |
-
! | 8 | Masonic Lodge | | c.1924 built | NE corner Church & Price Sts. | Brick home, in Douglasville Commercial Historic District, of Douglasville Lodge No. 289 F.A.M., which was organized by 1901.{{Cite web |last=Lisa Raflo |date=May 24, 1989 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Douglasville Commercial Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=89000850}} |access-date=November 15, 2019 |publisher=National Park Service}} Includes map with photo locations and directions indicated. With {{NRHP url|id=89000850|photos=y|title=accompanying 14 photos from 1988 (Masonic Lodge in photo #13}} |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1848-49 built | Third floor of Greek Revival-style brick courthouse was built by and for the Masons, and was still in use as a Masonic hall in 1980.{{Cite web |date=1980 |title=Thematic National Register Nomination-Georgia Courthouses-Architectural Survey: Greene County Courthouse |url={{NRHP url|id=80001083}} |access-date=November 11, 2017 |publisher=National Park Service}} |
-
! | 10 | 125px | 1854 built | Perry St. | Also known as "Old Seminary Building"; includes Greek Revival, Federal styling Originally serving as a school building. Masons met there for more than a century. Later served as a Gwinnett History Museum. |
-
! | 11 | Beulah Grove Lodge No. 372, Free and Accepted York Masons | 125px | 1910 built | 2525 Old Lower River Rd., near Douglasville, Georgia | Pleasant Grove, Georgia | A two-story wood building.{{Cite web |last1=Lynn Speno |last2=Gwen Sommers Redwine |date=December 2009 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Beulah Grove Lodge No. 372, Free and Accepted York Masons / Pleasant Grove School / Pleasant Grove Colored School |url={{NRHP url|id=09001301}} |access-date=July 8, 2018 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=09001301|photos=y|title=accompanying 16 photos from 2009}} |
-
! | 12 |Masonic Temple |1912 built |341 Bull Street |
81.09433|source:Doncram|name=Masonic Temple (Savannah, Georgia)}}
| Designed by Freemason Hyman W. Witcover. Included in Savannah Historic District, in Jasper Ward. Now the Gryphon Tea Room. |
-
! | 13 | Old Masonic Lodge | 125px | 1899 built | 321 South Main Street | Built as a meeting hall for Tifton Lodge No. 47. Contributing building to Tifton Commercial Historic District. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Georgia|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Georgia (U.S. state))
=Hawaii=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 1 | Hilo Masonic Lodge Hall-Bishop Trust Building | 125px | 1908–1910 built | Keawe and Waianuenue Streets |
- |
=Idaho=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 1922 built | 85 W. Central St. |
116.676548|name=Salubria Lodge No. 31}}
| |
-
! | 2 | Coeur d'Alene Masonic Temple | 1909 built | 525 Sherman Ave. |
-
! | 3 | 125px | 1937 built | 100 S. 2nd Ave. | Built by a Mason from England; still a meetingplace in 2010. |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1917 built | 100 N Coeur d'Alene Ave | Brick building at left in photo, part of Harrison Commercial Historic District |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1865 built | | Contributing in Idaho City Historic District.{{cite web|url={{NRHP url|id=75000626}}|title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Idaho City / Bannock City / West Bannock |publisher=National Park Service|author=Nancy F. Renk |date=January 18, 1974 |access-date=June 8, 2023}} With {{NRHP url|id=75000626|photos=y|title=accompanying 22 photos, with Masonic Hall on PDF pages 35 and 37}}. |
| 6
| 125px | 1884 built | Main St. between Second and Third |
---|
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Idaho|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Idaho)
=Illinois=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Aurora, Illinois) | 125px | 1924 built | 104 S. Lincoln Ave. |
-
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Chicago, Illinois) | 125px | 1892 built | | A skyscraper built in 1892 that became the tallest building in Chicago in 1895. It was demolished in 1939. Designed by Burnham and Root. |
-
! | 3 | 125px | 1912 built | 600 N. Wabash Avenue | Built by architects Huehl and Schmidt in 1912 |
|Myrtle Masonic Temple Association
|File:ERIS Building (1) © Alycia Stack 2018.jpg |1911 built 2018 renovated |4240 W. Irving Park Road |Chicago, Illinois |Architects: Hatzfeld & Knox Cornerstone laid in 1910, building completed in 1911. Operated as a Masonic Temple Association (chapters included Mayfair and Zenith) through 1981. 1981-2015 Bethel Korean Presbyterian Church Current owners are ERIS Brewery and Cider House, which opened in 2018. |
---|
-
! | 4 | New Masonic Building and Oriental Theater | 125px | 1926 built | 24 & 32 W Randolph Street | Designed by Rapp and Rapp in Late Gothic Revival and Art Deco style |
-
! | 5 | Collinsville Masonic Lodge Hall | 125px | 1912 built | 213 W. Clay St. |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Temple Building (Maywood, Illinois) | 125px | 1917 built | 200 S. 5th Ave. | Prairie School style, designed by Eben Ezra Roberts |
-
! | 7 | Masonic Temple Building (Oak Park, Illinois) | 125px | 1905 built | 119-137 N. Oak Park Ave. | Prairie School style, designed by Eben Ezra Roberts |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1896-1900 built | 203 West High Street |
-
! | 9 | Masonic Temple Lodge No. 420 | 125px | c. 1900 built | 628-628 S. Fourth St. | Contributing property in a historic district. |
-
! | 10 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Peoria, Illinois) | 125px | 1924 built | 400 NE Perry Ave. | Has stained-glass windows; contributing property in a historic district. |
-
! | 11 | 125px | 1900 built | 111-113 W. 3rd St. |
-
! | 12 | 125px | 1891 built | N. Main St. | Includes Chicago, Gothic, and Commercial Style architecture |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Illinois|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Illinois)
=Indiana=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 1 | 125px | 1902 built | 213 W. Main St. | Romanesque architecture Mt. Zion Lodge No. 211 currently meets in the building. Also houses Retail shops, office and residential apartments. |
-
! {{CP color}}| 2 | 125px | 1817 built | | Built in 1817. Many Masons who were initial state leaders of Indiana met here. Included in Corydon Historic District which became NRHP-listed in 1973. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 3 | Masonic Temple (Evansville, Indiana) | 125px | 1913 built | 301 Chestnut St. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 4 | Masonic Temple (Fort Wayne, Indiana) | 125px | 1926 built | 206 E. Washington Blvd. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 5 | Masonic Temple (Franklin, Indiana) | 125px | 1922 built | 135 N. Main St. | Classical Revival building, now "Johnson County Museum of History", originally a Masonic temple constructed by Franklin Lodge No. 107 |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 6 | 125px | 1908 built | 525 N. Illinois Ave. | Classical Revival building also known as Indiana Freemasons' Hall |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 7 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Indianapolis, Indiana) | 125px | 1927 built | Indianapolis, Indiana | The world's largest Scottish Rite building; a Gothic structure that an international association of architects once labeled "one of the seven most beautiful buildings in the world."Christopher Hodapp (2005), [https://books.google.com/books?id=O7m29W5zShQC&pg=PA312 Freemasons for Dummies], {{ISBN|0-7645-9796-5}}, {{ISBN|978-0-7645-9796-1}}. Page 312. |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1909 built | | the largest Shrine Temple in the United States |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 9 | F. & A.M. Tuscan Lodge No. 143 | | 1913 built | 828 Washington St. | Included the Citizens State Bank and the Lagro Hardware Company{{cite web |url=https://issuu.com/foxlitho/docs/4581-business_journal_march_2021-fb |title=Lagro Revitalization |last=Slacian |first=Joseph |editor= |date=Spring 2021 |magazine=Business Journal |publisher=The Paper of Wabash County |pages=15–20 |access-date=April 27, 2024 |via=Issuu}} |
-
! {{CP color}}| 10 | 125px | 1817 built | | "birthplace of Freemasonry in Indiana",{{Cite web |title=Grand Lodge of Indiana |url=http://crypticmasonpage.moonfruit.com/#/gl-of-indiana/4534463821 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110714113826/http://crypticmasonpage.moonfruit.com/#/gl-of-indiana/4534463821 |archive-date=2011-07-14 |access-date=2011-05-09}} included in the Madison Historic District |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 11 | 125px | 1900 built | 312 Main St. | Oldest continuously active Masonic lodge in Ripley County. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 12 | Masonic Temple (Muncie, Indiana) | 125px | 1920 built | 520 E. Main St. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 13 | 125px | 1916 built | 224 North 8th Street. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Indiana|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Indiana)
=Iowa=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1917 built | 413, 417, 427, 429 Douglas Ave. | Neoclassical building commissioned by Wallace M. Greeley, a local banker and civic leader, at the high point of Progressive era construction in the central business district. |
-
! | 2 | Champlin Memorial Masonic Temple | 125px | 1907 built | 602 Story St. | Chicago style / Commercial style architecture, designed by Proudfoot & Bird |
-
! | 3 | Iowa Masonic Library and Museum | 125px | 1955 built | 813 First Ave. SE | Library, museum and Grand Lodge administration building whose dedication is asserted to have been "the most important event in Iowa Masonry" during the 20th century"{{Cite web |title=Web Page Under Construction |url=http://www.gl-iowa.org/building.html}} |
-
! | 4 | Cedar Rapids Scottish Rite Temple | 125px | 1927 built | 616 A Avenue N.E. | NRHP-listed as "Consistory Building No. 2". |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1937 built | 821 Armory Ave. | Art Deco, designed by William L. Perkins |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Temple of Des Moines | 125px | 1913 built | 1011 Locust St. | Beaux Arts architecture, designed by Proudfoot & Bird |
-
! | 7 | Scottish Rite Consistory Building | 125px | 1927 built | 6th Ave. and Park St. |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1923 built | 115 N. Main |
-
! | 8.5 | Masonic Temple | | 1920-21 built | 317 E. 3rd Street | Three-story brick building costing, with furnishings, more than $104,000, claimed to be the first Masonic lodge building in Iowa, a contributing building in Muscatine's Downtown Commercial Historic District. |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1922 built | 820 Nebraska St. | Spanish Colonial Revival{{Cite web |last=Marcy Stenwall |date=February 9, 2001 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Sioux City Masonic Hall |url={{NRHP url|id=03001389}} |access-date=July 13, 2016 |publisher=National Park Service}} with {{NRHP url|id=03001389|photos=y|title=12 photos}} |
-
! | 10 | Masonic Temple Building (Stuart, Iowa) | 125px | 1894 built | 1311 N. 2nd St. |
-
! | 11 | 125px | 1928 built | 325 E. Park Ave. | Moorish or "Phoenician" Revival design by local architect and Mason John G. Ralston. |
-
! | 12 | 125px | 1893 built | 201 Barnes St. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Iowa|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Iowa)
=Kansas=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Union Implement and Hardware Building-Masonic Temple | 125px | 1900 built | 121-123 W. Main |
-
! | 2 | Scottish Rite Temple (Kansas City, Kansas) | 125px | 1908 built | {{coord|39|6|50|N|94|37|34|W|name=Scottish Rite Temple (Kansas City, Kansas)}} |
-
! | 3 |Kansas City Scottish Rite Temple | | 1928-30 built | | |
-
! | 4 | Masonic Temple (Salina, Kansas) | 125px | 1927 built | 336 S. Santa Fe Ave. |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Grand Lodge Building | 2014 NRHP-listed | 320 SW. 8th Ave. | Topeka | {{Cite web |last=Brianna McKenzie |date=June 4, 2014 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Masonic Grand Lodge Building / Masonic Grand Lodge Office and Library, MW Grand Lodge of Kansas Library and Museum, Grand Lodge AF & AM of Kansas; KHRI # 177-2617 |url=https://www.nps.gov/nr/feature/places/pdfs/14000833.pdf |publisher=National Park Service}} |
-
! | 6 | Towanda Masonic Lodge No. 30 A.F. and A.M. | | 1904 built | 401 Main St. |
-
! | 7 | Arkansas Valley Lodge No. 21, Prince Hall Masons | 125px | 1910 built | 615 N. Main St. | Built in 1910 by a Prince Hall lodge which was chartered in 1885. |
-
! | 8 | Scottish Rite Temple (Wichita, Kansas) | 125px | 1887 built | NW corner of 1st St. at Topeka |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Kansas|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Kansas)
=Kentucky=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1910 built | Off US 27 | One-story brick building of lodge organized in 1887.{{Cite web |date=1984 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Burnside Lodge |url={{NRHP url|id=84001946}} |access-date=October 17, 2018 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=84001946|photos=y|title=accompanying three photos from 1983 and 1984}} |
-
! | 2 | Cadiz Masonic Lodge No. 121 F. and A.M. | 125px | Built c.1854 | Jefferson and Monroe Sts. | Cadiz, Kentucky | Individually listed on NRHP and also included in Cadiz Downtown Historic District; has served as "Trigg County Historical Museum". |
-
! | 3 | Ceralvo Masonic Hall and School | | 2015 NRHP-listed | 942 Ceralvo Rd. | |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1908 built | Kentucky Route 70 | |
-
! | 5 | Dundee Masonic Lodge No. 733 | 125px | 1902 built | 11640 KY 69 N. | Built to serve as a Masonic lodge meeting place and as Methodist church. |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Hall (Eastwood, Kentucky) | | 1852 built | In or near Fisherville | In the Fisherville neighborhood of Louisville. |
-
! | 7 | 125px | 1913 built | 121 N. Mulberry St. |A fine Arts and Crafts-style three-story brick building for one of the first chartered (1823) Masonic lodges in Kentucky.{{Cite web |last=Philip Thomason |date=December 2, 1986 |title=Historic Resources of Hardin County: Morrison Lodge (HDE-48) |url={{NRHP url|id=88001798}} |access-date=March 26, 2018 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=88001798|photos=y|title=two photos from 1983}}.{{Cite web |last=Philip Thomason |date=December 2, 1986 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Hardin County Multiple Resource Area - Partial Inventory |url={{NRHP url|id=64000226}} |access-date=March 26, 2018 |publisher=National Park Service}} |
-
! | 7.5 | 125px | 1893 built | 308 Ann Street, stone, [2] | Romanesque Revival in style; contributing in Frankfort Commercial Historic District. |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1867 built | 314 Main St. | A three-story brick building. |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1939 built | Public Square | A two-story stone building, also known as Jamestown Masonic Lodge.{{Cite web |last=L. Martin Perry |date=August 5, 1993 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Jamestown Masonic Lodge / RU-37 |url={{NRHP url|id=93001586}} |access-date=December 17, 2017 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=93001586|photos=y|title=five photos}}. |
-
! | 10 | 125px | | 4th St. | Has pressed tin cornice and cast iron storefront.{{Cite web |last=J. C. Henderson |date=Fall 1983 |title=Kentucky Historic Resources Inventory: Lewisport Masonic Lodge / Pat's Beauty Salon-Masonic Lodge |url={{NRHP url|id=84001541}} |access-date=February 24, 2019 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=84001541|photos=y|title=accompanying pictures}} |
-
! | 11 | Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Temple | 125px | 1930 built | 200 E. Gray St. |
-
! | 12 | Milton Masonic Lodge and County General Store | 125px | c.1875-99 built | Main St. | Two-story three-bay brick building built for the Milton masonic lodge, and still serving in 1982. |
-
! | 13 | Munfordville Presbyterian Church and Green River Lodge No. 88 | 125px | 1835 built | 3rd and Washington Sts. | |
-
! | 14 | Masonic Temple (Paducah, Kentucky) | | 1904 built | 501-505 S. 7th St. |
-
! | 15 | Masonic Widows and Orphans Home | 2002 NRHP-listed |3701 Frankfort Ave. | |
-
! | 16 | Masonic Hall-Federal Commissary Building | 125px | 1860 built | near Smithland | Used by the Federal government during the American Civil War as a commissary. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Kentucky|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Kentucky)
=Louisiana=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Building (Alexandria, Louisiana) | 125px | 1927 built | Fourth and Johnston Sts. |
-
! | 2 | Prince Hall Masonic Temple (Baton Rouge, Louisiana) | 125px | 1924 built | 1335 North Blvd. | Classical Revival Originally constructed as an Odd Fellows lodge, the building was purchased by the Prince Hall Freemasons in 1948. |
-
! | 3 | 125px | 1880 built | LA 172 and LA 5 |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1916 built | 116 East Vermilion Street | Lodge was chartered in 1857. Current building from 1916 replaced original one. |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Temple (Shreveport, Louisiana) | 125px | 1937 built | 1805 Creswell St. |
-
! | 6 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Shreveport, Louisiana) | 125px | 1915 built | 725 Cotton St. |
- |
=Maine=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Hall (Augusta, Maine) | 125px | 1894 built | 313-321 Water St. | Renaissance-style, designed by John Spofford |
-
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Belfast, Maine) | 125px | 1877 built | High St. (U.S. 1) | |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Hall (Guilford, Maine) | 125px | 1916 built | | Built 1916. Demolished in 2000. |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1908 built | 11 Sabattus St. | Designed by George M. Coombs in Exotic Revival and/or Moorish style |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Temple (Portland, Maine) | 125px | 1911 built | | |
- |
=Maryland=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 1880 built | | Two-story gable-front frame and concrete-block building with a brick veneer facade, constructed c. 1880 and substantially expanded in the mid-1950s. |
-
! | 2 | Grand Lodge of Maryland Masonic Temple | 1866 built | |
-
! | 3 | 200px | Began 1921. Member designed and built. Completed 1923. | | |Two-story brick building, built circa 1923. Renovations in 1970's (interior) and 2015 (exterior). Recent renovations to interior in connection with Glen Burnie Lodge, No 213 Centennial (2021) include refurbished staircase, addition of new front doors, and new stained glass sign. |
=Massachusetts=
{{anchor|Boston Masonic Temple}}
Boston has been the site of several significant Masonic buildings.Henry Leonard Stillson and William James Hughan, editors (1906), [https://books.google.com/books?id=QSAZAAAAYAAJ History of the Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons]. Boston and New York: The Fraternity Publishing Company. Pages 248-250.
In 1830, the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts bought land on the corner of Tremont Street and Turnagain Alley. A Temple was constructed on the site and dedicated in 1832, but initially could not be owned by the Grand Lodge because of legal limitations on the value of real estate that the Grand Lodge could hold. Turnagain Alley became Temple Place and the Temple School, established by Bronson Alcott, was housed there during the 1830s. The Temple also held a concert hall and was the site of many public lectures by Ralph Waldo Emerson, including his reading of The Transcendentalist in 1842.{{Cite web |title=Emerson entry |url=http://www.unm.edu/~rgoodman/emerson.html}}{{Cite web |title=The Transcendentalist |url=http://www.emersoncentral.com/transcendentalist.htm}} Masons used the Masonic Temple for meetings until 1858, when the building was sold to the U.S. government for use as a courthouse.[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1885/05/19/103016303.pdf A Boston Courthouse: Reminiscences of the Anti-Masonic Campaign Revived], The New York Times, May 19, 1885. (From the Boston Traveller, May 16, 1885.) The government sold the building in 1885 and it was remodeled into commercial space for the R. H. Stearns department store.
Beginning in 1859, Boston's Masons occupied a building at the corner of Tremont and Boylston Streets that was known as Winthrop House, and that was rededicated as "Freemason's Hall" in December 1859. That building was destroyed by fire in April 1864. A grand new Masonic Temple building, designed by Merrill G. Wheelock, was built in its place on the same site and dedicated in 1867.[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1867/06/25/80232207.pdf Masonic Celebration. Dedication of a New Masonic Temple in Boston. The President and Members of His Cabinet Participate. A General Holiday---Business Suspended and the Streets Crowded, Interesting Ceremonies, Speeches, Poems and Toasts. The Dedication Ceremonies Yesterday--A Grand and Impressive Spectacle. Masonic Celebration in Boston--The Presidential Party in Attendance--Interesting Ceremonies.], The New York Times, June 25, 1867, Page 1.William D. Stratton. [https://books.google.com/books?id=GkEZAAAAYAAJ Dedication memorial of the new Masonic temple, Boston]. Lee & Shepard, 1868. The second temple was also destroyed by fire in 1895{{cite news |title=Ruined Shrine |newspaper=The Boston Globe |date=September 8, 1895 |page=9 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/113468463/masonic-temple-fire-boston-1895/ |access-date=November 22, 2022}} and replaced at the same location with a building designed by George F. Loring and Sanford Phipps, dedicated on December 27, 1899.{{cite news |title=New Masonic Temple |newspaper=The Boston Evening Transcript |date=December 27, 1899 |page=3 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/113468921/boston-masonic-temple-dedication-1899/ |access-date=November 22, 2022}}
{{gallery
|File:Sights in Boston and suburbs, or, Guide to the stranger (1856) (14760870352).jpg|First Masonic Temple at Tremont St. and Temple Place, Boston, 1856. St. Paul's Church is on the left.
|File:WinthropHouse TremontSt BoylstonSt Boston.png|Winthrop House, Tremont St., Boston, after the fire, 1865
|File:1865 The new Masonic Temple, Boston, by J. H. Buffords' Lith., M. G. Wheelock, Desr., from the Digital Commonwealth - commonwealth 7s75dj16h.jpg|Second Masonic Temple on Tremont St., Boston, 1865
|File:1906 MasonicTemple TremontSt Boston.png|Third Masonic Temple on Tremont St., Boston, 1906
}}
Also in Massachusetts:
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1880 built | |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Building (Newton, Massachusetts) | 125px | 1896 built | 296 to 304 Walnut Street & 456 to 460 Newtonville Avenue | Part of Newtonville Historic District, which is NRHP-listed |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Temple (Quincy, Massachusetts) | 125px | 1926 built | 1170 Hancock St. | Classical Revival building from 1926 |
-
! | 7 | Masonic Block (Reading, Massachusetts) | 125px | 1984 NRHP-listed | 600-622 Main Street | Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals and other architecture |
-
! | 8 | Masonic Temple (Springfield, Massachusetts) | 125px | 1923 built | 339-341 State Street |
-
! | 9 | Masonic Temple (Worcester, Massachusetts) | 125px | 1914 built | Ionic Ave. |
-
! | 10 | Masonic Hospital | | | | Former Whittall estate, Juniper Hall, donated to the Masons in 1927, in what is now Prospect Park. Ownership taken by the town of Shrewsbury in 1976; demolished in 1979.{{Cite web |last=Sue Wambolt |date=August 8, 2012 |title=Shrewsbury property rich in history |url=https://www.communityadvocate.com/2012/08/08/shrewsbury-property-rich-in-history/ |access-date=June 1, 2018}} |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Massachusetts|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Massachusetts)
=Michigan=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
| 1 | 125px | 1890 built | 700 N. Madison Ave. | Moorish Revival with Richardsonian Romanesque elements. |
-
| 2 | Masonic Temple Building (Cadillac, Michigan) | 125px | 1889 built | 122-126 N. Mitchell St. | A Romanesque building completed in 1889, designed by Sydney Osgood, NRHP-listed |
-
! | 3 | 125px | 1922 built | 500 Temple St. | Built in 1922 and NRHP-listed, this is the largest Masonic Temple in the worldAlex Lundberg and Greg Kowalski, Detroit's Masonic Temple, Arcadia Publishing, 2006. |
| 3.5
| Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Michigan | 125px | 1924 built | Gratiot Ave. & McDougall St. | Built in 1924 as Amaranth Lodge, acquired in 1951 by the state's Prince Hall Grand Lodge.{{Cite news |last=Hanu Barghouthi |date=January 23, 2022 |title=Black Freemason's lodge in Detroit joins National Register of Historic Places |publisher=The Detroit News |url=https://news.google.com/articles/CBMikQFodHRwczovL3d3dy5kZXRyb2l0bmV3cy5jb20vc3RvcnkvbmV3cy9sb2NhbC9kZXRyb2l0LWNpdHkvMjAyMi8wMS8yMy9ibGFjay1mcmVlbWFzb25zLWxvZGdlLWRldHJvaXQtbmF0aW9uYWwtcmVnaXN0ZXItaGlzdG9yaWMtcGxhY2VzLzY2Mjk1OTYwMDEv0gEqaHR0cHM6Ly9hbXAuZGV0cm9pdG5ld3MuY29tL2FtcC82NjI5NTk2MDAx?hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US%3Aen}} |
---|
| 4
| Masonic Temple Building (East Lansing, Michigan) | 125px | 1916 built | 314 M.A.C. Ave. |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Temple Building (Kalamazoo, Michigan) | 125px | 1913 built | 309 N. Rose St. | Italian Renaissance style |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Temple Building (Lansing, Michigan) | 125px | 1924 built | 217 S. Capitol Ave. |
-
! | 7 | Masonic Temple Building (Marshall, Michigan) | 125px | 1913 built | |
-
! | 8 | Ye Olde Courthouse Masonic Hall | 125px | Built 1890 | Central Ave. | Built as a courthouse; served Masons from 1893 to 1997. Also known as "Omer Masonic Hall". |
-
! | 9 | E.S. Swayze Drugstore/Otisville Mason Lodge No. 401 | 125px | 1874 built | 106 Main St. |
-
! | 10 | Masonic Temple (Port Hope, Michigan) | 125px | 1867 built | 4425 Main St. |
-
! | 11 | Port Sanilac Masonic and Town Hall | 125px | 1884 built | 20 N. Ridge St. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Michigan|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Michigan)
=Minnesota=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Colonial Hall and Masonic Lodge No. 30 | 125px | 1922 built | 1900 3rd Ave., S. |
-
! | 2 | Clearwater Masonic and Grand Army of the Republic Hall | 125px | 1888 built | 205–215 Oak Street | Joint meeting hall shared with a Grand Army of the Republic post.{{Cite web |last=Hackett |first=John J. |date=April 1978 |title=Minnesota Historic Properties Inventory Form: Clearwater Masonic Lodge No. 28/G.A.R. Hall No. 112 |url={{NRHP url|id=79001259}} |access-date=2015-06-19 |publisher=National Park Service}} |
-
! | 3 | 125px | 1905 built | 4 W. 2nd Street | Longstanding focal point of Duluth's most influential fraternal organization, further noted for its collection of 80 original hand-painted stage backdrops.{{Cite web |last=Anderson |first=Rolf T. |date=2014-12-03 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Duluth Masonic Temple |url=http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0083_duluthmasonictemple.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160411012203/http://www.mnhs.org/shpo/nrhp/docs_pdfs/0083_duluthmasonictemple.pdf |archive-date=2016-04-11 |access-date=2019-05-05 |publisher=National Park Service}} |
-
! | 4 | Masonic Temple Delta Lodge No. 119 | 125px | 1917 built | 325 W. Main |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1888 built | 528 Hennepin Avenue. | Richardsonian Romanesque Masonic Temple, built in 1888, now Hennepin Center for the Arts |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1906 built | 2011 Dupont Ave. S. | Romanesque, built in 1894–1906 for use as a church (Fowler Methodist Episcopal Church) and converted for Masonic use in 1915.{{Cite web |year=2007 |title=Fowler Methodist Episcopal Church |url=http://www.ci.minneapolis.mn.us/hpc/landmarks/Dupont_Ave_S_2011_Scottish_Rite_Temple.asp |publisher=Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission}} |
-
! | 7 | Pleasant Grove Masonic Lodge | 125px | 1868 built | Near Stewartsville |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1910 built | 1898 Iglehart Avenue |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1909 built | 255 Main St. | Beaux-Arts temple and Scottish Rite Valley particularly noted for its intact collection of 98 theatrical backdrops and original stage equipment.{{Cite web |last1=Curran |first1=Christine A. |last2=Charlene K. Roise |last3=Charles W. Nelson |date=August 1997 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form: Winona Savings Bank Building |url={{NRHP url|id=98000152}} |access-date=2015-06-24 |publisher=National Park Service}} |
-
! | 10 | 1911 built | 137 Broadway Avenue |Chartered on January 18, 1906, and still active to the present day. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Minnesota|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Minnesota)
=Mississippi=
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Mississippi|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Mississippi)
=Missouri=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Lodge (Grandin, Missouri) | | 1988 built | 5th and S. Elm Sts. | Two-story vernacular frame building. |
-
! | 2 | Ancient Landmark Masonic Lodge Number 356 A.F. and A.M., aka Harrisburg School | 125px | 1878(?) built | 140 S. Harris St. | |
-
! | 3 | 125px | 1873 built | 133 N. Main St. | Three-story building with Greek Revival and Italianate features, built to serve primarily as meeting place for fraternal lodges.{{Cite web |last=Karen Baxter & Tim Maloney |date=August 2012 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Ironton Lodge Hall |url=http://dnr.mo.gov/shpo/nps-nr/13000191.pdf |access-date=2017-01-01 |publisher=Missouri Department of Natural Resources}} (includes 8 photographs from 2012) |
-
! | 4 | H. E. Gensky Grocery Store Building, aka Capitol City Lodge No. 9 F. & A.M. | 125px | 1915 built | 423 Cherry St. | Early Commercial in style |
-
! | {{small|5}} | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Joplin, Missouri) | 125px | 1923 built | 505 Byers Ave. |
-
! | {{small|6}} | | 1920 built | 2301 E. Linwood Blvd. and 3201 Park Ave. |
-
! | {{small|7}} | 125px | 1909 built | 903 Harrison St. |
-
! | {{small|8}} | Kennett City Hall and Masonic Lodge | | 1903 built | 122 College St. | Shared with Kennett's City Hall. |
-
! | {{small|9}} | Masonic Temple (Kirksville, Missouri) | 125px | 1930 built | 217 E. Harrison St. | Four-story Egyptian Revival-style building. |
-
! | {{small|10}} | | 1847–48 | | |
-
! | {{small|11}} | Moolah Temple of the Mystic Shrine | 125px | 1912 built | 3821 Lindell Boulevard | Moorish Revival architecture. Contributing building in St. Louis's Midtown Historic District |
-
! | {{small|12}} | | 1886 built | 3615-3619 Dr. Martin Luther King Blvd.{{coord|38|38|49|N|90|13|37|W|name=Negro Masonic Hall}} | Romanesque. Prince Hall masons began using the building in 1909. Demolished after a fire in 1995. |
-
! | {{small|13}} | New Masonic Temple (St. Louis, Missouri) | 125px | 1926 built | 3681 Lindell Boulevard | More than {{convert|185|ft|m}} tall, constructed of Bedford limestone with gray granite trim; designed by architects Eames and Young. |
-
! | {{small|14}} | Scottish Rite Cathedral (St. Louis, Missouri) | 125px | 1924 built | 3633 Lindell Boulevard | Designed by William B. Ittner |
-
! | 15 | Lambskin Masonic Temple | 125px | 1987 NRHP | 1054 S. Kingshighway Boulevard |
90.2636|name=Lambskin Masonic Temple}}}}
| Art Deco, designed by Edward F. Nolte, of German descent, incorporating aspects of Germany's Art Nouveau Movement.{{cite report|type=none|url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/63820953 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Forest Park Southeast Historic District Boundary Increase|author=Sally F. Schwenk |author2=Kerry Davis |author3=Anne Schwenk |date=May 25, 2000 |publisher=National Park Service }} |
-
! | 16 | 125px | c. 1790-1791 built | 241 St. Mary's Road | Poteaux-sur-sol construction |
-
! | 17 | Abou Ben Adhem Shrine Mosque | 125px | 1923 built | St. Louis Street | Arabesque, built in 1923 |
-
! | {{small|18}} | Masonic Temple (Warrensburg, Missouri) | | 1893-94 built | 101-1-3 W. Market St., and 301-303 N. Holden St. |
-
! | {{small|19}} | Mount Zion Lodge Masonic Temple | 125px | 1933 built | 304 E. Main St. | An "austere" Classical Revival building with Tuscan pilasters |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Missouri|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Missouri)
=Montana=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Billings, Montana) | 125px | 1910 built | 2806 Third Ave. N. | Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals, Second Renaissance Revival |
-
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Deer Lodge, Montana) | 125px | 1919 built | 501-503 Main St. |
112.73493|source:Doncram|name=Masonic Temple (Deer Lodge, Montana)}}
| Modest Classical Revival. Included in Deer Lodge Central Business Historic District. |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Building (Fort Benton, Montana) | 125px | 1882 built | 1418 Front St. |
-
! | 4 | Masonic Temple (Great Falls, Montana) | 125px | 1914 built | 821 Central Ave. |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1919 built | Neill and Park Aves. | Moorish Revival style. Operated by city of Helena as the Helena Civic Center. |
-
! | 6 | Lavina Temple Lodge #101 | 125px | 1908 built | 101 Main St. | Western Commercial in style[http://mastermason.org/montanafreemasons/Newsletters/ABriefHistory.pdf Lavina-Temple Lodge #101]{{cite web|url={{NRHP url|id=07001293}}|title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Lavina State Bank / Bank of Lavina, Lavina Post Office; Lavina Temple Lodge #101; 24GV0166 |publisher=National Park Service|author=Delia Hagen |date=August 2003 |access-date=August 4, 2017}} Includes photos, and with {{NRHP url|id=07001293|photos=y|title=three photos from 2005}}. |
-
! | 7 | Masonic Temple (Lewistown, Montana) | 125px | 1908 built | 322 W. Broadway St. | A standalone three-story building built by stonemasons from Croatia.{{Cite web |date=1976 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Masonic Temple / Lewistown Lodge No. 37 A.F. & A.M. |url={{NRHP url|id=79001401}} |access-date=August 3, 2017 |publisher=National Park Service}} With {{NRHP url|id=79001401|photos=y|title=photos}}. |
-
! | 8 | Masonic Lodge (Missoula, Montana) | 125px | 1909 built | 120-136 E. Broadway Ave. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Montana|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Montana)
=Nebraska=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1902-03 built | Off US 34 | |
- id="Masonic Temple (Callaway, Nebraska)"
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Callaway, Nebraska) | 125px | | S. Grand Ave |
99.92572|source:Doncram|name=Masonic Temple (Callaway, Nebraska)}}
| |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Temple (Lincoln, Nebraska) | 125px | 1934 built | 1635 L St. |
-
! | 4 | Scottish Rite Temple (Lincoln, Nebraska) | 125px | 1916 built | 332 Centennial Mall S |
-
! | 5 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Omaha, Nebraska) | 125px | 1912-1914 built | 2001 Douglas Street | Neoclassical building, known today as the Omaha Scottish Rite Masonic Center{{Cite web |title=Our History is Our Strength |url=http://www.scottishriteomaha.org/history}} |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Temple (Benson, Omaha, Nebraska) | | 1926 built | 5901-5905 Maple Street |
96.00368|source:Doncram|name=Masonic Temple (Benson, Omaha, Nebraska)}}
| Benson neighborhood in Omaha, Nebraska | Three-story Classical Revival building with an irregular brick parapet, included in Benson Commercial Historic District.{{Cite report |url=https://history.nebraska.gov/sites/history.nebraska.gov/files/doc/DO09-HD025%20Benson%20Commerical%20Historic%20District.pdf |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Benson Commercial Historic District / D009 |last1=Emily Lenhausen |last2=Amanda Loughlin |date=July 2020 |publisher=History Nebraska |type=none |archive-date=2022-08-02 |access-date=2022-08-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220802182104/https://history.nebraska.gov/sites/history.nebraska.gov/files/doc/DO09-HD025%20Benson%20Commerical%20Historic%20District.pdf |url-status=dead }} Includes numerous photos from 2020. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Nebraska|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Nebraska)
=Nevada=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Austin Masonic and Odd Fellows Hall | 125px | 1867 built | 105 Main St. | Two-story brick building. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Nevada|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Nevada)
=New Hampshire=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | New England Masonic Charitable Institute | 125px | 1858 built | 30 Town House Rd. |
71.01153|name=New England Masonic Charitable Institute}} |
- |
=New Jersey=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 2008 NRHP-listed | 170 Main Street | NRHP-listed Originally built as a Presbyterian Church, the building was purchased by the local lodge in 1930 |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1929 built | 105 East 7th Street | Built by Jerusalem Lodge No. 26 F & AM |
-
! | 3 | Bellevue Avenue Colored School | 125px | 1883 built | 81 Bellevue Ave. | Built and notable as a school for black children. Later became the King David F & AM Lodge No. 15. |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1793 built | 102 Barrack Street | Included in State House District. At some point it was used as tourist information center. |
- |
=New Mexico=
=New York=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Camden Masonic Temple of Philanthropic Lodge No. 164 F. & A.M. | 125px | 1863 Built | 1 Masonic Ave |
-
! | 2 | | 1889 built | 6 Cornell Ave. | Built in 1889, in Stick/Eastlake style |
3
|Advance Masonic Temple, Free and Accepted Masons |1915 built |2114 30th Ave, Astoria, New York 11102. 40.7693942, -73.9274833 |Astoria, New York |Built in 1915 in Italianate Style |
---|
-
! | 4 | DePew Lodge No. 823, Free and Accepted Masons | 125px | 1916 built | 5497 Broadway |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1928 built | 7552 S. State St. | Built 1928 in Colonial Revival style. After 2002 it served as a local history museum. |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1922 built | 131 N. 55th St. | Built as a Shriners' mosque and originally contained Masonic lodge rooms. It is neo-Moorish in style, and its architect was a Mason.{{Citation needed|date=August 2010}} Later known as New York City Center, a theatre. |
-
! | 7 | Masonic Temple — Newport Lodge No. 445 F. & A.M. | 125px | 1903 built | 7408 NY 28 |
-
! | 7 | 125px | 1925 built | 253 W. 73rd St. | "Designed to be 'the finest Masonic club in the world', the building served as a hostel for visiting Masons, and when it finally opened in 1927, it included an enormous banquet room, an Olympic-sized pool, a gymnasium, a 1,500-seat theater and a roof garden."{{Cite news |last=Jesse McKinley |date=December 25, 1994 |title=F.Y.I.: Masonic mysticism |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/12/25/nyregion/fyi-195553.html}} |
-
! | 8 | Masonic Building and Hall (Manhattan) | 125px | hall: | hall: |
73.991799|format=dms|name=Masonic Hall}} building: 71 W. 23rd St. {{coord|40.743021 |
73.99229|format=dms|name=Masonic Building}}
| The Masonic Building and Hall were designed by Harry P. Knowles, one of the architects of the New York City Center. The Masonic Building is a commercial enterprise, generating funds for the Lodge's charitable activities. It replaced the Masonic Temple on the same site, built in 1875 and designed by Napoleon LeBrun. The Hall includes a 1200-seat auditorium – the Grand Lodge Room – and a dozen other Lodge Rooms, all elaborately ornamented. The Hall's interior was restored in 1986–96 by Felix Chavez, Fine Art Decorating.{{cite tourflat}}, pp. 82-83 |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1865 built | 1144 Centre Rd. | Built in 1865 in Italianate style |
-
! | 10 | 125px | 1700 built | 20 Livingston Avenue | A Dutch Colonial house used as headquarters by Washington, acquired by the New York Masonic Grand Lodge in 1932, declared a National Historic Landmark in 1966.{{Cite web |last=Cecil McKithan |date=January 1978 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: De Wint House |url=http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Text/66000568.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120609234233/http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Text/66000568.pdf |archive-date=2012-06-09 |access-date=2018-06-03 |publisher=National Park Service}} and [http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Photos/66000568.pdf Accompanying three photos, exterior, from 1975, and a period drawing.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120609234245/http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Photos/66000568.pdf |date=2012-06-09 }} |
-
! | 11 | 125px | 1914 built | 240 Washington St. |
-
! | 12 | Tower Homestead and Masonic Temple | | c.1800, 1830, 1910 built | 210 Tower St. and Sanger St. | With a 3-stage tower, built in 1896.{{Cite web |last=Doris Vandelipp Manley |date=September 1976 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Tower Homestead and Masonic Temple |url=http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=6101 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121005132459/http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=6101 |archive-date=2012-10-05 |access-date=2010-01-08 |publisher=New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation}} See also: {{Cite web|url=http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=6102|title=Accompanying 10 photos|access-date=2011-05-09|archive-date=2012-10-05|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121005132511/http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=6102|url-status=dead}} |
13
|Jephtha Masonic Lodge No. 494 |File:Jephtha Masonic Lodge No. 494.jpg |1860 Charter 1904 built |342-343 New York Aven |Three story building constructed 1904–1905 |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in New York (state)|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in New York (state))
=North Carolina=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 1913 built | 80 Broadway Street | Designed by British American architect and Freemason Richard Sharp Smith, the building was opened in April 1915. |
-
! | 2 | | 1917 built | Jct. of NC 1410 and NC 1300 | I-house-style frame building, moved in 1948; bottom floor housed a public school for six years. |
-
! | 2.5 | 125px | 1823 built | 142 W. King St. | Hillsborough, North Carolina | "an interesting example of the adaptive usage of early Greek Revival motifs in a building constructed specifically as a Masonic lodge" |
-
! | 3 | 125px | c.1852 built | 224 Raleigh St. | Holly Springs, North Carolina | Greek Revival |
-
! | 4 | Bank of Onslow and Jacksonville Masonic Temple | 125px | 1916 built | 214-216 Old Bridge St. | Jacksonville, North Carolina | Beaux Arts and Tudor Revival building from 1916 |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1802-09 built | 516 Hancock St. | Site of a duel in 1802 |
-
! | 5.5 | 125px | c.1855 built | 221 Mason St. | Fayetteville, North Carolina | Greek Revival |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1838 built | East and Masonic Sts. | Greek Revival |
-
! | 7 | Josephus Daniels House | 1920 built | 1520 Caswell St. | Originally the home of Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy under President Woodrow Wilson. Subsequently, purchased by the local area Freemasons in 1950, and converted into a meeting hall. |
-
! | 8 | Masonic Temple Building (Blount Street, Raleigh, North Carolina) | 125px | 1907 built | 427 South Blount Street | Prince Hall affiliated. |
-
! | 9 | Masonic Temple Building (Fayetteville Street, Raleigh, North Carolina) | 125px | 1907 built | 133 Fayetteville Street | North Carolina's first reinforced concrete skyscraper. |
-
! | 10 | Masonic Temple Building (Shelby, North Carolina) | 125px | 1925 built | 203 S. Washington St. |
-
! | 11 | 125px | c.1854 and 1915-17 built | 115 N. Second St. | Greek Revival |
-
! | 12 | Masonic Hall (Waynesville, North Carolina) | 125px | 1927 built | 114 Church St. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in North Carolina|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in North Carolina)
=North Dakota=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1887 built |31 6th Ave. N. | Brick building in two {{convert|50x90|ft|m}} parts, with pressed metal cornice displaying "MASONIC BLOCK" and "1887". Included in Casselton Commercial Historic District.{{Cite web |last=Ronald L.M. Ramsey |date=May 28, 1982 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Casselton Commercial Historic District |url=http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NRHP/Text/82001311.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131103021949/http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NRHP/Text/82001311.pdf |archive-date=November 3, 2013 |access-date=June 3, 2018 |publisher=National Park Service |page=13}} and [http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NRHP/Photos/82001311.pdf Accompanying photos (Masonic Block in photo 27)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131103021548/http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NRHP/Photos/82001311.pdf |date=2013-11-03 }} |
-
! | 2 | Northern Lights Masonic Lodge | 125px | 1916 built | Ninth St. | A Bungalow/Craftsman style building, built in 1916, NRHP-listed for its architecture |
-
! | 3 | 125px | 1916 built | 403 Sixth St. |
-
! | 4 | Masonic Block (Fargo, North Dakota) | 125px | 1884 built | 11 S. 8th St. |
- |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Center (Grand Forks, North Dakota) | | 1913 built | 413-421 Bruce Ave. | Renaissance design by Joseph Bell DeRemer |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Temple | | 1907 built | 108 Main St. S. | Italianate brick building, a contributing building in the Minot Commercial Historic District.{{Cite web |last1=Mark T. Fiege |last2=Mary E. McCormick |last3=Fredric L. Quivik |name-list-style=amp |date=July 1986 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Minot Commercial Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=86002823}} |publisher=National Park Service}} and {{NRHP url|id=86002823|title=accompanying 21 photos from 1985|photos=y}} |
-
! | 7 | | 1905 built | 260 Front St. | Built for Mizpah Lodge #39, chartered in 1893, after the small town had accumulated seven fraternal organizations, so scheduling meetings had become an issue. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in North Dakota|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in North Dakota)
=Ohio=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1902 built | 19 E. Waterloo St. | |
-
! | 1.5 | Masonic Lodge (Circleville, Ohio) | | 1876 built | 113-115 S. Court St. | Included in Circleville Historic District |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1920 built | 3615 Euclid Ave. | Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements architecture |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Temple (Columbus, Ohio) | 125px | 1899 built | 34 N. 4th St. |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1915 built | 1276 N. High St. | Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals, Italian Renaissance architecture |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1925 built | 861-867 Mt. Vernon Ave. | Also known as Pythian Temple and James Pythian Theater, a Colonial Revival building from 1925, NRHP-listed |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1925-1928 built | 573 W. Riverview Avenue | Classical Revival |
-
! | 7 | 125px | 1890 built | 422 Broadway | Built 1916 in Colonial Revival style.{{Cite web |last=Nancy Recchie |date=December 1984 |title=East Liverpool Central Business District Multiple Resource Assessment (partial: history/architecture) |url={{NRHP url|id=64000620}} |publisher=National Park Service}} as a private residence, it was purchased by the Masons in 1910 and converted into a meeting hall. Also known as the "Godwin-Knowles House". |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1880-84 built | 409 West Main Street | An Italianate house, originally the home of the Marvin Kent family, it was purchased by the local Masonic lodge in 1923 and converted into a meeting hall. |
-
! | 9 | Masonic Temple (Mechanicsburg, Ohio) | 125px | 1909 built | N. Main St. |
-
! | 10 | Medina Masonic Temple and Medina Theater | File:NRHP-Medina Masonic Temple.jpg | 1924 built | 120 N. Elmwood Ave. and 139 W. Liberty St. |
-
! | 11 | 125px | 1923 built | 22 W. Church St. |
-
! | 12 | Rushville Masonic Hall | 125px | c.1850 built | Main St. & Market St. |
82.43162|source:Doncram|name=Rushville Masonic Hall}}
| Richland Township, Fairfield County, Ohio | Town Hall and Masonic Hall, in Rushville Historic District{{Cite report |url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/71988189 |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Rushville Historic District |last=Nancy Recchie |date=June 1979 |publisher=NARA |access-date=January 24, 2022 |type=none}} ({{NationalArchivesNote}}) |
-
! | 13 | Masonic Temple (Sandusky, Ohio) | 125px | 1889 built | 302 Wayne St. | Romanesque; also known as "Science Lodge No. 50 F & A M", determined NRHP-eligible |
-
! | 14 | Masonic Temple (Springfield, Ohio) | 125px | 1927 built | 125 W. High St. | NRHP-listed[http://www.nps.gov/history/nr/listings/20081224.HTM Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 12/15/08 through 12/19/08], National Park Service, 2008-12-24. Accessed 2010-07-26. |
-
! | 15 | Masonic Temple Building (Vermilion, Ohio) | 125px | 1870 built | Main St., S. of Liberty St. |
-
! | 16 | 125px | 1820 built | 634 N. High St. | Asserted in 1999 to be the oldest Masonic lodge west of the Allegheny Mountains which has been in continuous Masonic use.{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YfvhVln0D20C&pg=GBS.PA419.w.1.2.0.1 |title=Ohio Historic Places Dictionary, Volume 2 |date=1999 |publisher=Somerset Publishers, Inc. |isbn=9781878592705 |editor-last=Lorrie K. Owen |page=475 |access-date=November 4, 2019}} Plans in 2016 were to convert it to condominiums, though retaining space for a Masonic museum and offices. |
| 17
|West Milton Lodge No. 577 | |102 North Washington St. | |
---|
-
! | 18 | Masonic Temple (Youngstown, Ohio) | 125px | 1909 built | 223–227 Wick Ave. | Colonial Revival |
-
! | 19 | 125px | 1884 built | 18 Commercial St. |
-
! | 20 | 125px | 1857 built | 333 Market St. | |
-
! | 21 | Masonic Temple Building (Zanesville, Ohio) | 125px | 1903 built | 36-42 N. Fourth St. |
-
! | 22 | St. Mark's Masonic Temple No. 7 of the Prince Hall Free & Accepted Masons | 125px | 1927 built, 2009 listed | 988 E. Long Street | |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Ohio|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Ohio)
=Oklahoma=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Atoka, Oklahoma) | 1915 built | 301 Court St. | Has stained glass windows. |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1924 built | 301 W. Broadway | Italian Renaissance Revival; home of the Enid Symphony Orchestra. |
-
! | 3 | First National Bank and Masonic Lodge | | 1906 built (Bank portion) | 301 N. Main St. | Best example of Georgian Revival architecture in Osage County |
-
! | 4 | Scottish Rite Temple (Guthrie, Oklahoma) | 125px | 1919 built | 900 E. Oklahoma | Built 1920–1923; described as the largest and most elaborately designed and constructed Masonic Temple in the state.http://www.ocgi.okstate.edu/shpo/NRHPdfs/87000503.pdf {{Dead link|date=March 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} |
-
! | 5 | International Temple, Supreme Assembly, Order of the Rainbow for Girls | 125px | 1951 built | 315 East Carl Albert Parkway |
95.7647|name=International Temple, Supreme Assembly, Order of the Rainbow for Girls}}
| Moderne headquarters for the International Order of the Rainbow for Girls, which was founded in McAlester in 1922 and grew to 50,000 members in 1940, before declining. |
-
! | 6 | McAlester Scottish Rite Temple | 125px | 1907 built | 2nd St. and Adams Ave. |
-
! | 7 | 125px | 1929 built | 1st and Main Sts. | It comprises half of the second floor of the Coleman Theatre complex, designed in Spanish Colonial Revival style by the Boller Brothers of Kansas City, Missouri. |
-
! | 8 | India Temple Shrine Building | 125px | 1923 built | 621 N. Robinson Ave. | Built in 1923 by multiple Masonic lodges. Later home of the Journal Record and site of a museum focused on the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, which damaged the building |
-
! | 9 | Pond Creek Masonic Lodge No. 125 | 125px | 1953 built | 126 Broadway Ave. | |
-
! | 10 | Tonkawa Lodge No. 157 A.F. & A.M. | 125px | 1925 built | 112 N. 7th St. | Classical Revival, designed by Oklahoma City architects Hawk & Parr |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Oklahoma|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Oklahoma)
=Oregon=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Ashland Masonic Lodge Building | 125px | 1909 built | 25 N. Main St. |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1901 built | 200 S. Dupont St. |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Cemetery and Hope Abbey Mausoleum | 125px | 1859 (cemetery) | 25th and University Sts., Eugene, Oregon | Hope Abbey is an Egyptian Revival-style mausoleum designed by Ellis F. Lawrence and dedicated in 1914. |
-
! | 4 | Masonic Temple (Pendleton, Oregon) | 125px | 1887 built | 18 SW Emigrant Ave. |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1923 built | 5308 N. Commercial Ave. |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1923 built | 6401 SE Foster Road | Beaux Arts, Exotic Revival |
-
! | 7 | | 1930 built | 7126 SE Milwaukie{{coord|47.47262|N|122.64828|W|name=Sellwood Masonic Lodge}} | Designed by Francis Marion Stokes. |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Oregon|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Oregon)
=Pennsylvania=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1923 built | 1524 W. Linden St. |
-
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Chambersburg, Pennsylvania) | 125px | 1823 built | 74 S. 2nd St. |
-
! | 3 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania) | | 19__ built | 2701 N. Third St. | |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1930 built | | Moorish Revival style{{Cite web |title=Zembo history |url=http://zembo.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=22&Itemid=40}} |
-
! | 5 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (New Castle, Pennsylvania) | 125px | 1925-26 built | Neo-classic |
-
! | 6 | Masonic Temple (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) | 125px | 1873 built | 1 N. Broad St. | Houses the headquarters of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania and has been designated a National Historic Landmark |
-
! | 7 | Masonic Temple (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) | 125px | 1914-15 built | Fifth and Lytton Avenues | Greek Revival; is now Alumni Hall (University of Pittsburgh), a contributing property in a historic district |
-
! | 8 | Masonic Temple and Scottish Rite Cathedral (Scranton, Pennsylvania) | 125px | 1930 built | 416–420 North Washington Avenue |
- |
=Rhode Island=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Providence, Rhode Island) | 125px | 1926-2007 built | Francis Street | One of a pair of buildings listed in the National Register of Historic Places as "Veterans Memorial Auditorium—Masonic Temple". Construction was started by Freemasons in 1926, but was abandoned in 1928 and did not resume until the 2000s. The building was completed in 2007 and is now the Providence Renaissance Hotel.Daniel Barbarisi, [http://www.projo.com/news/content/temple20_05-20-07_U55N40I.2951dc8.html Temple digs], The Providence Journal, Sunday, May 20, 2007 |
- |
=South Carolina=
=South Dakota=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Aberdeen, South Dakota) | 125px | 1899 built | 503 S. Main St. |
-
! | 2 | | 1907-08 built | 222 S. Main St. | |
-
! | 3 | | 2020 NRHP-listed | 204 East Main St. | |
-
! | 4 | | 1916 built |200 E. Second Ave. | Major renovation of a former, damaged courthouse building in 1916 produced "massive" Colonial Revival building with pediment supported by four Ionic columns. |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1889 built | | Built as a schoolhouse, moved and converted in 1926 |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1923 built | 6th and Main Sts. |
-
! | 7 | Mt. Moriah Masonic Lodge No. 155 | 125px | 1917 built | 101 Main St. S |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1925 built | 130 S. Cherry Ave. |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1928 built | 201 W. Capitol Ave. | Classical Revival, designed by architects Perkins & McWayne |
-
! | 10 | Grand Lodge and Library of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons | 125px | 1924 built | 415 S. Main Ave. |
- |
=Tennessee=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 1823 built | S. 2nd Ave. | Oldest public building in Franklin, oldest Masonic Hall in continuous use in Tennessee. The Treaty of Franklin, in which the Chickasaw Indians sold their lands prior to being moved west to today's Oklahoma, was signed in this building in 1830. Sitting president Andrew Jackson was a participant. The building was used as a hospital for wounded Union soldiers after the Battle of Franklin, during the American Civil War.{{Cite web |last=Ben Levy and Cecil N. McKithan |date=February 26, 1973 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Hiram Masonic Lodge No. 7 / Masonic Hall |url={{NHLS url|id=73001859}} |publisher=National Park Service |format=pdf}} |
-
! | 2 | Shrine Building (Memphis, Tennessee) | 125px | 1923 built | 66 Monroe Ave. | Converted to apartments in 1981 and into 75 condominium apartments in 2005.Jane Roberts, [https://web.archive.org/web/20121104165411/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-132723645.html Shrine Building is going condo], Memphis Commercial Appeal, May 24, 2005[http://www.memphisdailynews.com/editorial/Article.aspx?id=28355 Turley Begins Shrine Building Conversion], Memphis Daily News, Tuesday, June 21, 2005Andrew Ashby, [http://www.memphisdailynews.com/editorial/Article.aspx?id=30475 Old Union Planters Building Gets Major Facelift], Memphis Daily News, Tuesday, June 20, 2006 |
-
! | 3 | Grand Lodge Building (Tennessee) | 125px | 1925 built | 100 7th Ave. N. | Classical Revival-style building designed by Nashville architects Asmus and Clark.{{Cite web |title=The Grand Lodge of Tennessee of the Free and Accepted Masons |url=https://www.nashvilledowntown.com/go/the-grand-lodge-of-tennessee-of-the-free-and-accepted-masons |access-date=April 24, 2018 |publisher=Nashville Downtown Partnership}} |
| 4
| | 1893 built | 119 Main St. | Its first floor was the Sevierville Public Library from 1928 to 1968; Masons stayed until 1973. |
---|
-
! | 5 | Stanton Masonic Lodge and School | | 1871 built | W. Main St. |
- |
=Texas=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1926 built | 311 W. 7th St. |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1922 built | 210 W. 27th St. | Colonial Revival dorm hall at University of Texas, Austin. Built and owned by Scottish Rite Masons to house Masons' daughters. |
-
! | 3 | Old Masonic Hall (Bellville, Texas) | 125px | 1886 built | 15 N. Masonic St. | Later home of Bellville Historical Society.[http://start.cortera.com/company/research/k5q5lzk0p/bellville-historical-society/ Cortera.com business directory listing for Bellville Historical Society] |
-
! | 4 | Blessing Masonic Lodge No. 411 | c.1875 built | 619 Ave. B (FM 616) |
-
! | 5 |Las Moras Masonic Lodge Building | | 1990 recorded Texas Historical Landmark[https://atlas.thc.state.tx.us/Details/5271003040 3040] |503 S. Ann St. |Ann Street (Highway 334) at Cook Alley, Brackettville |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1913 built | 500 S. Harwood Street | A monumental Beaux Arts structure in the Farmers Market District. Constructed in 1913 as an official headquarters for use by the Scottish Rite Masons and other local Masonic lodges, it is a fine example of early 20th century Beaux Arts architecture in Texas. Massive limestone and steel building for the Grand Lodge of Texas A.F. & A.M. in 1941 |
-
! | 7 | Hillcrest Masonic Lodge #1318 | |1947 built |8525 Midway Rd. |This building is situated in North Dallas in the old Love Field Quarry. Stone quarry walls can still be seen on the 30 ft drive down from the street. The Building is a York Rite - Royal Arch Temple. The property was renovated in 2016 and is a beautiful example of Freemasonry in North America.[https://dallasfreemasonry.org Hillcrest Masonic Lodge #1318 (Dallas, Texas] |
-
! | 8 | Farmersville Masonic Lodge No. 214, A.F. and A.M | 125px | 1888 built | 101 S. Main St. |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1932 built | 1100 Henderson St. |The building exhibits Neo-classical styling with Art moderne influences and features upper-story Ionic columns and monel alloy bas-relief doors. It features two grand staircases at the main entrance which leads to a terrace. The main doors depict the three Ancient Grand Masters of Masonic legend, King Solomon, Hiram, King of Tyre, and Hiram Abif. |
-
! | 10 | South Side Masonic Lodge No. 1114 | 125px | 1924 built | 1301 W. Magnolia |
-
! | 11 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (Galveston, Texas) | 125px | 1928 built | 2128 Church St. |
-
! | 12 |Masonic Hall | | 1966 recorded Texas Historical Landmark[https://atlas.thc.state.tx.us/Details/5267003164 3164] |613 Main St. | |
-
! | 13 | Masonic Building (Kerrville, Texas) | 125px | 1890 built | 211 Earl Garrett St. |
-
! | 14 | Royse City Lodge No. 663 A.F. & A.M. | 125px | 1925 built | 102 S. Arch St. | |
-
! | 15 | 125px | 1927 built | 130 S. Oakes |
-
! | 16 | Scottish Rite Cathedral (San Antonio, Texas) | 125px | 1924 built | 308 Ave. E |
-
! | 17 |Masonic Lodge Building | |1967 recorded Texas Historical Landmark |511 North Avenue D | |
-
! | 18 | 125px | 1932 built | 323 W. Front St. | Designed by Shirley Simons |
-
! | 19 | Masonic Lodge Hall (Waxahachie, Texas) | 125px | 1889 built | | Later the Ellis County Museum |
- |
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic buildings in Texas|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Texas)
=Utah=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1927 built | | Egyptian Revival. Contributing property in South Temple Historic District. |
- |
=Vermont=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1929 "created"{{Cite report|type=none |first=Miriam |last=Trementozzi |date=June 7, 1979 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Barre Downtown Historic District |url={{NRHP url|id=79000227}} |access-date=2016-06-16 |publisher=National Park Service}} with {{NRHP url|id=79000227|photos=y|title=Masonic Temple shown in #7 of 27 photos from 1979}}{{rp|10}} | 2 Academy Street | Monumental pedimented Tuscan portico, Masonic Temple signage, and offices extension to the rear added in 1929 to c.1830-built Greek Revival house. Included in Barre Downtown Historic District.{{rp|10}} |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1897 built | 1, 3 and 5 Church Street corner of Pearl Street | Richardsonian Romanesque; included in Head of Church Street Historic District. |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Temple (Northfield, Vermont) | 125px | | Elm & S. Main | |
-
! | 4 | Masonic Temple | | 1912 built | Eastern Avenue | Contributing in St. Johnsbury Historic District. |
- |
=Virginia=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | George Washington National Masonic Memorial | 125px | 1922-1932 built | Shuter's Hill | Only Masonic building supported and maintained by the 52 grand lodges of the United States. This is counter to common Masonic practice, where a building is only supported by the Grand Lodge of the state in which it resides. The building also houses the collection of Alexandria-Washington Lodge No. 22, which contains most of the Masonic-fraternal artifacts of George Washington, a Mason. |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1873 built | 43 S. Rogers St. | Italianate-style brick building built in 1873 to serve as a Masonic meetingplace and as a school for grades 1–12. The building's brickwork is seven-course American bond. It is "the only Masonic building in Loudoun County that follows the design principles of the Freemasons. From its outset until 1921, the building also served as a public school, and is significant as the finest surviving school building of its time."{{Cite web |last=Georjan D. Overman |date=August 27, 1998 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Hamilton Masonic Lodge |url=http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Loudoun/053-0004_Hamilton_Masonic_Lodge_1999_Final_Nomination.pdf |access-date=2010-06-17 |publisher=Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission}} and [http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Loudoun/HamiltonMasonicLodge_photo.htm Accompanying photo at Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission, undated] |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Temple | 125px | 1930 built | | Contributing property in the Downtown Portsmouth Historic District.{{Cite web |title=NRHP Final Nomination Form |url=http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Cities/Portsmouth/124-5063_Downtown_Portsmouth_HD_2004_Final_Nomination.pdf |access-date=May 17, 2017 |website=dhr.virginia.gov}} |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1926 built | | Currently the Altria Theater, formerly the Landmark Theater and colloquially known as "The Mosque"; designed by Marcellus E. Wright Sr. in association with Charles M. Robinson and Charles Custer Robinson in 1925 and completed in 1926.[http://www.scottymoore.net/richmond.html Landmark Theater] |
-
! | 5 | Masonic Temple (Richmond, Virginia) | 125px | 1888-93 built | 101-107 W. Broad St. | An 1888 building that is asserted to be the finest example of Richardsonian Romanesque style architecture in Virginia, and, at its time of construction, to be "one of the 'most magnificent examples of modern architecture in the South.'"{{Cite web |last=Robert P. Winthrop |date=November 4, 1982 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: The Masonic Temple |url=http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Cities/Richmond/127-0296_Masonic_Temple_1983_Final_Nomination.pdf |access-date=2010-06-16 |publisher=Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission |page=2}} and [http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Cities/Richmond/MasonicTemple_photo.htm Accompanying photo at Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission, undated] |
-
! | 6 | Mason's Hall (Richmond, Virginia) | 125px | 1785-1787 built | 1807 E. Franklin St. | The oldest building built as a Masonic meetingplace and in continuous use for that purpose in the United States.{{Cite web |last=Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission staff |date=December 1972 |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Mason's Hall |url=http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Cities/Richmond/127-0019%20-%20Mason's%20Hall%20-%20Final%20Nomination.pdf |access-date=2010-06-16 |publisher=Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission}} and [http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Cities/Richmond/MasonsHall_photo.htmAccompanying photo at Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission, undated] |
- |
=Washington=
:(compare to {{PAGESINCATEGORY:Masonic_buildings_in_Washington_(state)|pages}} in :Category:Masonic buildings in Washington (state))
=West Virginia=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Fairmont, West Virginia) | 125px | 1906 built | 320 Jefferson St. |
-
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Parkersburg, West Virginia) | 125px | 1915 built | 900 Market St. |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Temple-Watts, Ritter, Wholesale Drygoods Company Building | 125px | 1914 built | 1100-1108 E. Third Ave. |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1886 built | West Main & North High Streets |
78.756591|name=Literary Hall}}}}
| |
- |
=Wisconsin=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Appleton, Wisconsin) | 125px | 1923 built | | Now known as The History Museum at the Castle, this is a Tudor Revival building. |
-
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Ashland, Wisconsin) | 125px | Built in the 1880s | 522 Main Street West | Still home of the local Masonic Lodge, also houses a pharmacy on the lower level. |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Temple (Beloit, Wisconsin) | | Built in the 1840s | 229 West Grand Ave. | Still home of the local Masonic Lodge. |
-
! | 4 | 125px | 1927 built | 616 Graham Ave. |
-
! | 5 | 125px | 1899 built | 317-319 S Barstow & 306 Main Sts. | Romanesque building. |
-
! | 6 | 125px | 1923 built | 301 Wisconsin Ave. |
-
! | 7 | | Built 1923 | 2422 West National Avenue | Classical Revival; designed by architect Richard Oberst. Has been deemed NRHP-eligible but not listed due to owner objection[http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Content.aspx?dsNav=Nrc:id-1079,N:4294963828-4294963813&dsNavOnly=N:1159&dsRecordDetails=R:NR1071 Property listing on the Wisconsin Historical Society website]{{Cite web |title=History of Excelsior Lodge, Lake Masonic Center website |url=http://lakemasoniccenter.org/lakelodge/history |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202044407/http://lakemasoniccenter.org/lakelodge/history |archive-date=2017-02-02 |access-date=2018-06-03}}[http://www.lrcmilwaukee.org/ Life Restoration Church website] |
-
! | 8 | 125px | 1911 built | 827 N. Eleventh St. |
-
! | 9 | 125px | 1919 built | 3000 W. Wisconsin Ave. | |
-
! | 10 | Wisconsin Consistory Building | 125px | 1936 built | 790 N. Van Buren St. |
-
! | 10.5 | Neillsville Masonic Temple Lodge No. 163 | 125px | 1928 built | 316 Hewett St. | |
-
! | 11 | 125px | 1898 built | 117-119 S. Main St. |
-
! | 12 | 125px | 1923 built | 200 W. Main St. | Classical Revival, Prairie School Later operated as Monroe County Museum. |
-
! | 13 | Masonic Temple Building (Viroqua, Wisconsin) | 125px | 1921 built | 116 S. Main St. |
-
! | 14 | Masonic Temple (Watertown, Wisconsin) | 125px | 1906 built | 2-6 E. Main St. | {{Cite web |title=Masonic Temple, Original |url=http://www.watertownhistory.org/articles/MasonicTempleOrig.htm}} Part of Main Street Commercial Historic District{{Cite web |date=January 2012 |title=2 e MAIN ST | Property Record |url=https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Records/Property/HI76210}} |
- |
=Wyoming=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | Masonic Temple (Casper, Wyoming) | 125px | 1914 built | 105 N. Center St. | Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements, Early Commercial architecture |
-
! | 2 | Masonic Temple (Cheyenne, Wyoming) | 125px | 1901 built | 1820 Capitol Ave. | Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals, Second Renaissance Revival |
-
! | 3 | Masonic Temple (Laramie, Wyoming) | 125px | | 407 E. Ivinson Ave. |
105.59162|name=Masonic Temple (Laramie, Wyoming)}}
| Greek Revival architecture, documented by HABS. |
-
! | 4 | Masonic Temple (Rock Springs, Wyoming) | 125px | 1912 built | 218 B Street | |
- |
Federal district
=District of Columbia=
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! | 1 | 125px | 1929 built | 1315 K St NW | Moorish Revival style |
-
! | 2 | 125px | 1911-1915 built | | Constructed as, and continues to be the headquarters building for the Supreme Council, Scottish Rite (Southern Jurisdiction, USA). |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 2 | International Temple of the Order of the Eastern Star | 125px | 1909 built | | Built in 1909 for Perry Belmont and sold to the Order of the Eastern Star in 1935. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 3 | Julius Lansburgh Furniture Co., Inc. | 125px | 1867-1870 built | |Originally constructed to contain several Masonic lodge rooms and offices. The first-floor stores were leased, and a grand ballroom on the second-floor was rented out. The building was purchased in 1921 by Julius Lansburgh and operated as a furniture store until 1970, it was listed as an historic building in 1974. Renovated in 2000, it now serves as the headquarters of the Gallup Organization. |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 4 | Masonic Temple (Washington, D.C.) | 125px | 1903 built | 801 Thirteenth St., NW | Classical Revival building later used as a museum by the National Museum of Women in the Arts |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 5 | Prince Hall Masonic Temple (Washington, D.C.) | 125px | 1922 built | 1000 U St., NW | Designed by African American architect Albert I. Cassell |
- |
Insular areas
=Puerto Rico=
List of masonic buildings in Puerto Rico, an insular area of the United States, include:
class="wikitable sortable" style="width:98%"
! | ! width = 18% | Building ! width = 8% class="unsortable" | Image ! width = 10% |Dates ! |Location ! width = 8% |City, State ! class="unsortable" | Description |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 1 | 120px | 1912 built | 64E Sol Street | Designed by architect Sabas Honore, with elaborate and well-preserved front facade. In 1984, the building was still being used by Adelphia Lodge #1, the oldest Masonic Lodge located in Mayagüez.{{Cite web |last=Manuel Bermudez, Jorge Rigau and Beatriz del Cueto de Pante |year=1984 |title=Logia Adelphia |url={{NRHP url|id=86000323}} |access-date=2016-05-25 |publisher=National Park Service}} with {{NRHP url|id=86000323|photos=y|title=6 photos from 1984-85}} |
-
! {{NRHP color}}| 2 | Logia Masónica Hijos de la Luz | 120px | 1894 built | José Celso Barbosa Avenue | Probably the oldest Masonic building in Puerto Rico. |
- |
See also
- List of Masonic buildings, for all other notable ones world-wide