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  2. Robert Macoy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Macoy

    Robert Macoy (October 4, 1815 – January 9, 1895) [1] was born in Armagh, Ulster County, Ireland.He moved to the United States at the age of 4 months. [2] He was a prominent Freemason, and was instrumental in the founding of the Order of the Eastern Star [3] and the Order of the Amaranth. [4]

  3. Rob Morris (Freemason) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rob_Morris_(Freemason)

    After he became a Mason on March 5, 1846, he became convinced that there needed to be a way for female relatives of Masons to share in some measure in the benefits of Freemasonry. While teaching at the Eureka Masonic College ("The Little Red Brick School Building") in Pickens, Mississippi in 1849–1850, he wrote Eastern Star's first ritual ...

  4. History of Freemasonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Freemasonry

    The history of Freemasonry encompasses the origins, evolution and defining events of the fraternal organisation known as Freemasonry.It covers three phases. Firstly, the emergence of organised lodges of operative masons during the Middle Ages, then the admission of lay members as "accepted" (a term reflecting the ceremonial "acception" process that made non-stone masons members of an operative ...

  5. W. B. Mason - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._B._Mason

    William Betts Mason ran the company until his death in 1912. The Mason family continued to oversee the company until the 1920s under William's wife, Marcena. In the late 1920s, W. B. Mason was sold to an employee and Brockton businessman, Samuel Kovner, [10] who started his career out by sweeping the floors at W. B. Mason as a boy. Under Kovner ...

  6. Prince Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Hall

    Hall was born between 1735 and 1738. [3] [4] [a] His place of birth and parents are also unclear.[5] [b] Hall mentioned in his writings that New England was his homeland.The Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, in its Proceedings of 1906, opted for 1738, relying on a letter from Reverend Jeremy Belknap, a founder of the Massachusetts Historical Society. [5]

  7. History of Masonic Grand Lodges in North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Masonic_Grand...

    The History of Freemasonry, Vol. 6 (Masonic History Co., NY, 1898) pages 1485-1486 online membership by state 1898 Weisberger, R. William et al. Freemasonry on Both Sides of the Atlantic: Essays concerning the Craft in the British Isles, Europe, the United States, and Mexico (2002), 969pp

  8. Marshalltown Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshalltown_Company

    An advertisement for a Marshalltown Trowel from 1912. The origins of Marshalltown can be traced back to the American inventor and entrepreneur Dave Lennox.While working in his machine shop in the mid-1880s in Marshalltown, Iowa, Mr. Lennox received a visit from a stonemason who asked him to make a better plastering trowel [7] while working on the construction site of the Marshall County ...

  9. John Landis Mason - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Landis_Mason

    John L. Mason. John Landis Mason (c. 1832 in Vineland, New Jersey – February 26, 1902) was an American tinsmith and the patentee of the metal screw-on lid for antique fruit jars commonly known as Mason jars. Many such jars were printed with the line "Mason's Patent Nov 30th 1858". [1] He also invented the first screw top salt shaker in 1858.