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The Masonic Temple in Kansas City, Missouri is a Neo-Classical Architecture building in the Beaux-Arts architecture tradition. [2] Designed by J.C. Sunderland, [ 3 ] the Masonic Cornerstone was laid October 8, 1910 [ 4 ] and the building held a public dedication ceremony on September 30, 1911.
Building Image Dates Location City, State Description; 1: Masonic Temple: 1908 built 1980 NRHP-listed 809 1st Ave. Fairbanks, Alaska: Masons purchased the building in 1908 and renovated to add a second story for lodge rooms and a main hall, in "Eclectic Renaissance Revival" style.
This list of museums in Kansas City, Missouri encompasses museums which are defined for this context as institutions (including non-profit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.
This beautiful edifice was the home of Ivanhoe Lodge No. 446. Ivanhoe, still known today as the jewel of the 18th Masonic district of Missouri, resides in the Waldo neighborhood in south Kansas City as of 1980. [1] The building was in disrepair by 1999, when it was demolished. [citation needed]
Past master of Falls City Lodge No. 376 of Louisville, Kentucky. At a meeting of the Grand Lodge of England, in the presence of the King and 8,000 Masons, he was created a past senior grand warden of that grand lodge. [10] Stanislav Binički (1872–1942), Serbian musician [25] Leon Milton Birkhead (1885–1954), American Unitarian minister [10]
In 1854, three Wyandot people and five white settlers – all of whom were Masons – coalesced in what is now Wyandotte County, Kansas, and petitioned the Grand Lodge of Missouri to establish a Lodge of Masons in a Wyandot Indian village. On August 4, 1854, the dispensation was granted and one week later Kansas Lodge U.D. (eventually to become ...
The building used by Lodge Mother Kilwinning Kilwinning, Ayrshire, consecrated in 1893, includes a museum of Masonic artefacts. The lodge traces its history to the building of Kilwinning Abbey, circa 1140. The current lodge building replaced a lodge building that was erected in 1779. [61]
Kansas City Cold Storage Company Building; Kansas City Live Stock Exchange; Kansas City Masonic Temple; Kansas City Museum; Kansas City Parks and Boulevards Historic District; Kansas City Police Station Number 4; Kansas City Power and Light Building; Kansas City Southern Railway Building (Kansas City, Missouri) Kansas City Title and Trust Building