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Odd Fellows Building (Owensboro, Kentucky) 1895: 1986 200-204 W. Third St. Owensboro, Kentucky: Beaux Arts architecture, Italian Renaissance architecture [12] Odd Fellows Building (Pikeville, Kentucky) 1915: 1984 333 2nd St.
Odd Fellows Building may refer to: in the United States. Odd Fellows Building (Red Bluff, California), listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) Odd Fellows Building and Auditorium, Sweet Auburn, Atlanta, Georgia, NRHP-listed; Odd Fellows Building (Inez, Kentucky) Odd Fellows Building (Owensboro, Kentucky), NRHP-listed
Laurel is a city in and the second county seat of Jones County, Mississippi, United States. As of the 2020 census, the city had a population of 17,161. [4] Laurel is northeast of Ellisville, the first county seat, which contains the first county courthouse. It has the second county courthouse, as Jones County has two judicial districts.
Unofficial Ellettsville historian Rachel Peden McCarty provided Deutsch with some background on the building and the local Odd Fellows. Ellettsville’s I.O.O.F was established Nov. 20, 1867, with ...
May 20—Eric Belcher stopped by the auction of the Odd Fellows Building on Thursday as a curious bystander, and didn't expect to walk away as the new owner of the 132-year-old building located on ...
Odd Fellows Hall, Independent Order of Odd Fellows Building, IOOF Building, Odd Fellows Lodge and similar terms are phrases used to refer to buildings that house chapters of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows fraternal organization. More specifically, these terms may refer to:
The Independent Order of Odd Fellows was established in Cuba when Porvenir Lodge no.1 was instituted in Havana on August 26, 1883. More lodges were then instituted the following years. [31] In 2012 there were about 116 Odd Fellows Lodges, 50 Rebekahs Lodges, 33 Encampments, 12 cantons and 2 Junior Lodges, totaling to about 15,000 members in ...
Odd Fellows from that time include John Wilkes (1725–1797) and Sir George Savile, 8th Baronet of Thornton (1726–1784), advocating civil liberties and reliefs, including Catholic emancipation. Political repressions , such as the Unlawful Oaths Act (1797) and the Unlawful Societies Act (1799), [ 4 ] resulted in neutral amalgamation of the ...