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The Masonic ceremony of laying the cornerstone occurring November 17, 1917, with the first Lodge meeting taking place on New Year's Day, 1918. [2] At its peak, the Masonic Temple was home to 38 different Masonic bodies: 27 Craft Lodges, six Chapters , two Preceptories (Knights Templar), two Scottish Rite Bodies and Adoniram Council. [2]
Toronto Masonic Temple, 888 Yonge Street. No longer affiliated with Freemasonry; Masonic Temple (St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador) Montreal Masonic Memorial Temple, Montreal, QC; Saint John Masonic Temple, Saint John, New Brunswick; St. Mark's Masonic Lodge, Baddeck, NS
CTV Temple-Masonic Temple in Toronto — Added to the City of Toronto Heritage Property Inventory in 1974, and designated under the Ontario Heritage Act in 1997. Originally constructed as a Masonic Hall, the building has changed hands a number of times. From the 1960s through the 1990s, it housed a succession of live music clubs.
Hundreds of items insid the Masonic Temple, 1250 Middle-Bellville Road will be sold at 10 a.m. Jan. 6 during a public auction. The Mason groups are moving out, building to be sold, demolished.
Pages in category "Masonic buildings in Canada" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. ... (Toronto) Masonic Temple (Windsor, Ontario)
This is a list of all verifiable organizations that claim to be a Masonic Grand Lodge in Canada. A Masonic "Grand Lodge" (or sometimes "Grand Orient") is the governing body that supervises the individual "Lodges of Freemasons" in a particular geographical area, known as its "jurisdiction" (usually corresponding to a sovereign state or other major geopolitical unit).
The Canton Masonic Temple was rededicted during a service at the building Saturday afternoon. The century-old structure is used by five Mason bodies. Canton Masonic Temple: 100 years marked in ...
A writer in the Freemasons' Quarterly Review in 1839 claimed Nelson and his servant, Tom Allen, were Freemasons, but gives no evidence to support his claim. Hamon Le Strange, in his History of Freemasonry in Norfolk, says that among the furniture of the Lodge of Friendship No. 100, at Yarmouth , there is a stone bearing an inscription to Nelson.