Masonic Temple (Mechanicsburg, Ohio)

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Coordinates40°04′21″N 83°33′22″W / 40.07245°N 83.55603°W / 40.07245; -83.55603
AreaLess than 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built1909 (1909)
Masonic Temple
Front of the temple
Masonic Temple (Mechanicsburg, Ohio) is located in Ohio
Masonic Temple (Mechanicsburg, Ohio)
Masonic Temple (Mechanicsburg, Ohio) is located in the United States
Masonic Temple (Mechanicsburg, Ohio)
LocationN. Main St., Mechanicsburg, Ohio
Coordinates40°04′21″N 83°33′22″W / 40.07245°N 83.55603°W / 40.07245; -83.55603
AreaLess than 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built1909 (1909)
Architectural styleAmerican Craftsman
MPSMechanicsburg MRA
NRHP reference No.85001887[1]
Added to NRHPAugust 29, 1985

The Masonic Temple is a historic Masonic temple in the village of Mechanicsburg, Ohio, United States. Built in the 1900s for a local Masonic lodge that had previously met in a succession of buildings owned by others, it is the last extant Mechanicsburg building constructed for a secret society, whether Masonic or otherwise, and it has been designated a historic site because of its well-preserved American Craftsman architecture.

A part of Goshen Township was platted as the community of Mechanicsburg in 1814,[2]:596 and the village was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly in 1834.[2]:600 Clinton Lodge No. 113, F&AM, was chartered in the village nine years later, with Obed Horr as the first Worshipful Master. In their earliest years, the lodge met in assorted locations before finding a home in 1855 in a newly constructed structure: having working together with the village's Methodist Protestant church to build its new two-story building, they owned the building's second story, and the church the first. This arrangement persisted until 1889 and was ended upon the lodge's discovery of structural problems, whereupon they sold their interest in the building to the church and departed (the name being changed to "Mechanicsburg Lodge" around the same time);[3]:52 the church, in turn, had the building destroyed in the following year and replaced it with a newer and more commodious structure.[4]:473 Lodge meetings were held on the second story of a downtown building until the present structure became available.[3]:52 Land was purchased in February 1908, the cornerstone laid in August, and the building formally dedicated in March 1909, construction having cost approximately $20,000. More than two hundred men were members of the lodge in 1917.[4]:638

At the peak of Mechanicsburg's prosperity and prominence, during the final years of the nineteenth century and the earliest years of the twentieth,[5]:2 several other secret societies were active in the village: the Royal Arch Masons (formed 1899), the Order of the Eastern Star (formed 1894),[3]:52 the Odd Fellows (formed 1855) and women's auxiliary, the black Odd Fellows (formed 1881) and women's auxiliary, the Knights of Pythias (formed 1891) and women's auxiliary, the Improved Order of Red Men (formed 1874),[3]:53 the Modern Woodmen (formed 1900), and the Maccabees (formed 1911).[3]:53 Surpassing one hundred members, both the Odd Fellows and the Knights of Pythias built lodge buildings in the late nineteenth century, but the Pythian Castle burned in 1916,[3]:53 and the same fate later befell the Odd Fellows' building.[5]:7 While the Odd Fellows later purchased the home of Oram Nincehelser, located on Main Street near the Masonic Temple,[6]:120 the latter building is the only extant structure constructed to be the meeting place for a Mechanicsburg secret society.[5]:7

Architecture

Historic site

References

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