The Cincinnati Masonic Center


Book Description

The history of the Cincinnati Masonic Center dates back to August 16, 1916, when the trustees of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, Valley of Cincinnati, received a letter from the Cincinnati Masonic Temple Company stating they had contracted to purchase land required. Necessary property transfers were set in motion on May 15, 1925. A cornerstone dedication took place on October 20, 1926, and a formal dedication was held on January 26, 1928.




Cincinnati's Freemasons


Book Description

The first Masonic lodge in Cincinnati was chartered in 1791, less than three years after the towns founding. Many prominent Cincinnatians have devoted their time, money, and effort to the fraternity. Many have also found knowledge, fulfillment, and camaraderie within the main and appendant bodies of the brotherhood. This book offers an introduction to the orders members, buildings, and related organizations in southwest Ohio. The contributions of the Queen Citys share of the worlds oldest and largest fraternity are revealed through images from lodges and other bodies, buildings, individuals, and numerous other sources.




100th Anniversary


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Oasis of Cincinnati


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New Jersey's Masonic Lodges


Book Description

Across New Jersey, thousands of men have entered through the doors of Masonic Lodge buildings, also known as "temples," over the fraternity's more than 250-year history in the Garden State. These buildings, from humble meeting spaces to elaborate single-purpose centers, stand tribute to the memory and influence of one of the oldest fraternities in the world, founded on the tenets of faith, hope, and charity. From governors and US Supreme Court justices to carpenters and stonemasons, Freemasonry has welcomed men from all walks of life, and the temples they built have played important roles in the civic, social, and charitable life of many towns. Although some lodges have been lost, many still remain and are presented here for the first time through photographs and images collected from various historical societies, museums, libraries, and Masonic organizations. This book attempts not to serve as an encyclopedic source but rather to catalog and organize the development of the Masonic temples in New Jersey.