Photographs of the Masonic Temple
My family and I were invited to tour the Visit Photography Masonic Temple in Philadelphia PA by a photographer friend. It was a fantastic educational experience for me and my family. It is especially significant to us because both my Grandfather Hanson Coey and uncle Major Grover Coey were masons.
A lot of history here:
A historic Philadelphia landmark, the Masonic Temple includes an expansive library and museum collection connected to Freemasonry.
The Masonic Temple is a historic Masonic building in Philadelphia. Located at 1 North Broad Street, directly across from Philadelphia City Hall, it serves as the headquarters of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, Free and Accepted Masons. The Temple features the Masonic Library and Museum of Pennsylvania, and receives thousands of visitors every year to view the ornate structure, which includes seven lodge rooms, where today a number of Philadelphia lodges and the Grand Lodge conduct their meetings.
The Temple was designed in the medieval Norman style by James H. Windrim, who was 27 years old at the time he won the design competition.[2] The massive granite cornerstone, weighing ten tons, was leveled on St. John the Baptist’s Day, June 24, 1868. The ceremonial gavel used on that day by Grand Master Richard Vaux was the same gavel used by President George Washington in leveling the cornerstone of the nation’s Capitol building in 1793.
The construction was completed five years later, in 1873. The interior, designed by George Herzog, was begun in 1887 and took another fifteen years to finish.[2]
The bold and elaborate elevations on Broad and Filbert Streets, especially the beautiful portico of Quincy granite, make it one of the great architectural wonders of Philadelphia. The exterior stone of the building on Broad and Filbert Streets is Cape Ann Syenite from Syne in Upper Egypt.[4]
On May 27, 1971, the Temple was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[1] It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1985. It was cited in its landmark designation as one of the nation’s most elaborate examples of Masonic architecture.
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2 Comments
Wow – very intriguing images. I have never been inside a masonic temple and the decorations are great! And the images are very well seen and taken – congratulations! Must be a lot of symbolism with those old Egyptian decorations I guess!
Hello Steve;
Thank you for the visit and the kind words, very much appreciated.
I will check out back yard images.
Cheers Lou!