List of Odd Fellows buildings

This is a list of notable Odd Fellows buildings, sometimes called "Odd Fellows Hall", "Independent Order of Odd Fellows Building", "IOOF Building", "Odd Fellows Lodge" and variations. Also included is a List of Odd Fellows cemeteries, some of which include contributing buildings.

There are many hundreds of Odd Fellows associated buildings; this list only aims to feature the most significant ones architecturally or otherwise. For the part of the United States, it is intended to cover all that have been documented in the National Register of Historic Places or similar historic registry.[1]

Several of the listed buildings are retirement homes.[2]

There is a building in Three Oaks, Michigan. The engraved granite marker reads:

Three Oaks 1909 IOOF Lodge 44

Australia

(ordered by state then city or town)

Building
Image DatesLocationCity, state Notes
Baroona Hall 1883-83-built
1992-QHR-listed[3]
15-17 Caxton Street, Petrie Terrace
27.4645°S 153.0131°E / -27.4645; 153.0131 (Baroona Hall)
Brisbane, Queensland Designed by Richard Gailey; has also been known as Caxton Street Hall, Josephsons Clothing Factory, and United Brothers Lodge.[3]
Cook Shire Hall 1907 built
1997 QHR-listed[4]
Helen Street
15.4706°S 145.2502°E / -15.4706; 145.2502 (Cook Shire Hall)
Cooktown, Shire of Cook, Queensland Replaced a 1907 hurricane-destroyed building; built for the Loyal Captain Cook Lodge of the North Queensland Branch of the Manchester Unity Independent Order of Oddfellows Friendly Society. Served as the Lodge's hall and meeting venue until at least 1936.[4]
Glennie Hall 1880-1891-built
<2001-QHR-listed[5]
66 Albion Street
28.2181°S 152.035°E / -28.2181; 152.035 (Glennie Hall)
Warwick, Southern Downs Region, Queensland Single-storey masonry hall built 1880-81 and extended 1891 for the Royal Rose of Warwick Manchester Unity Independent Order of Odd Fellows (MUIOOF) Lodge. Classical architecture; known also as Odd Fellows Hall
Oddfellows Home Hotel 1876-built
2004-QHR-listed[6]
Wood and Wantley Streets
28.2191°S 152.0252°E / -28.2191; 152.0252 (Oddfellows Home Hotel)
Warwick, Southern Downs Region, Queensland Boarding hotel built by a prominent member of the Rose Lodge of Oddfellows in Warwick.[6]
IOOF Building (Adelaide) 1963-completed Adelaide, South Australia First HQ of the Grand Lodge of South Australia of the IOOF was at 11-13 Flinders Street;[7] replaced by purpose-built 47 Gawler Place, completed in 1963.
Norfolk Hotel a.k.a. Oddfellows Hotel 1887-opened 47, South Terrace
32°3′25.49″S 115°44′57.92″E
Fremantle, Western Australia, Western Australia Victorian Georgian-style building known for most of its existence as Oddfellows Hotel
Wanslea (I/National Order of Oddfellows Orphanage) try Wanslea 1905-built
1996-WA-listed[8]
78 & 80 Railway St Cottesloe, Western Australia Federation Free Style two storey red brick orphanage
RAOB Lodge (Harbour Master's House, Oddfellows Building) try RAOB Lodge 283 Marine Tce Geraldton, Western Australia
Oddfellows Hall (Leederville)
a.k.a. IOOF Buffaloes Lodge
try IOOF Buffaloes Lodge 217 Oxford St Leederville, Western Australia
3 Oddfellow St Toodyay, Western Australia
Jager Stores 111-113 Stirling Terrace Toodyay, Western Australia Has also been known as Toodyay Newsagency, Markets, Drapery & Craft

Canada

IOOF Hall, Toronto

Denmark

Building
Image BuiltOdd Fellows
property
LocationCountry Description
Odd Fellows Mansion, Copenhagen 17511900 Copenhagen Denmark
Kong Hroar Loge No. 26 Denmark Once the home of Bishop Hertz (d. 1825),[9] is adjacent to the Roskilde Cathedral. It was purchased by the IOOF in 1930.[10]

Finland

Building
Image BuiltOdd Fellows
property
LocationCountry Description
Helsinki Odd Fellow House Bulevarden 11 A, 00120 Helsingfors, Finland Finland Swedish speaking Lodges
Helsinki Odd Fellow House Vuorimiehenkatu 23 b, 00140 Helsinki, Finland Finland Finnish speaking Lodges
Turku Odd Fellow House 20112011 Rätiälänkatu 2, Turku, Finland Finland In the Odd Fellow House in Turku there is space for 11 Lodges which have their meetings on the weeknights at 19.00. In Turku there are both Swedish and Finnish speaking Lodges, in this Odd Fellow House the Finnish speaking Lodges have their meetings. The special thing in this Odd Fellow House in Finland is that it is the only building which is built from the beginning for the Odd Fellow Lodges meetings.
Turku Odd Fellow House Auragatan 1 B, 20100 ÅBO (Turku) Finland Swedish speaking lodges in Turku (Åbo) have their meetings in this Odd Fellow House.

New Zealand

Building
Image BuiltOdd Fellows
property
LocationCountry Description
Oddfellows Hall (Reefton) 56 Bridge Street, Reefton New Zealand New Zealand Historic Places Trust/West Coast Category II historic place #3035.

Sweden

Building
Image BuiltOdd Fellows
property
LocationCountry Description
Banér Palace 18th century1922 Stockholm Sweden

United States

(ordered by state then city)

Building
Image BuiltNRHP
listed
LocationCity, state Description
Oddfellows House 19071980 825 1st Avenue Fairbanks, Alaska
IOOF Building (Kingman, Arizona) 19121986 208 North Fifth Street
35°11′22″N 114°3′0″W
Kingman, Arizona Mission/Spanish Revival architecture[11]
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Building (Benton, Arkansas) 19132004 123-125 North Market
34°33′58″N 92°35′16″W
Benton, Arkansas Early Commercial architecture[11]
Arroyo Grande IOOF Hall 1902 1991 128 Bridge St.
35°7′20″N 120°34′38″W
Arroyo Grande, California Romanesque[11]
Oddfellows Hall 1894[12] 2011 1226&1/2 Lincoln Way Auburn, California Three-story red brick Italianate home of IOOF Lodge No. 7, founded in 1852. Henry T. Holmes, builder of the Hall, was a '49er and a founding father of Auburn.[12]
IOOF Lodge No. 355 19172007 18819 East CA 88
38°11′30″N 121°5′6″W
Clements, California [11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Eureka, California) 18831978 123 F St.
40°48′17″N 124°9′54″W
Eureka, California Second Empire architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Ferndale, California) 18751992 425-431 Main Street
40°34′36.35″N 124°15′48.71″W
Ferndale, California Victorian False-front[13]
Fullerton Odd Fellows Temple ?2002 112 E. Commonwealth Ave.
33°52′13″N 117°55′25″W
Fullerton, California Early Commercial architecture[11]
Gabilan Lodge No. 372-Independent Order of Odd Fellows 19141986 117 Fourth St.
36°30′28″N 121°26′33″W
Gonzales, California Classical Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (La Grange, California) 18551979 Yosemite Blvd.
37°39′48″N 120°27′41″W
La Grange, California Vernacular Greek Revival architecture[11]
I.O.O.F. Hall (Mokelumne Hill, California) 1854 Center Street
38°18′7.77″N 120°42′21.52″W
Mokelumne Hill, California Expanded in 1861 to add Odd Fellows meeting space. Became what is believed to be first 3-story building in inland California. California Historical Landmark-listed
Odd Fellows Temple (Pasadena, California) 19331985 120 N. El Molino Ave.
34°08′53″N 118°08′12″W
Pasadena, California Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture, Spanish Colonial Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Building (Red Bluff, California) 18831976 342 Oak St.
40°10′36″N 122°14′3″W
Red Bluff, California Late Victorian, Italianate Victorian architecture[11]
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Building (San Diego, California) 18821978
32°42′42″N 117°9′31″W
San Diego, California Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture in the Gaslamp district of San Diego.[11]
Odd Fellows Lodge No. 365 1972 401 N. Hagar St. San Fernando, California
Odd Fellows Hall (Santa Ana, California) 19061983 309-311 N. Main St.
33°44′51″N 117°51′59″W
Santa Ana, California [11]
I. O. O. F. Lodge No. 55 Hall (Weaverville, Trinity County, California) ?
40°43′52″N 122°56′27″W
Weaverville, California Other title: John Cole Building, Historic American Buildings Survey-listed[11]
I.O.O.F. Hall (Woodbridge, California) 18611982 Main St.
38°9′17″N 121°17′59″W
Woodbridge, California Early Commercial architecture[11]
I.O.O.F. Building (Woodland, California) 19051982 723 Main St.
38°40′40″N 121°46′11″W
Woodland, California Mission/Spanish Revival architecture[11]
IOOF Hall (De Beque, Colorado) 19001993 Jct. of 4th St. and Curtis Ave.
39°20′0″N 108°12′51″W
De Beque, Colorado Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements architecture[11]
Longmont Lodge #29 1907 434 Main St Longmont, Colorado Facebook Page
Meeker I.O.O.F. Lodge—Valentine Lodge No. 47 18972014 400 Main St.
40°02′15″N 107°54′40″W
Meeker, Colorado
Russell Gulch IOOF Hall 18952011 81 Russell Gulch Road
39°46′48″N 105°32′05″W
Russell Gulch, Colorado
Centreville Hall 18761983 5725 Kennett Pike, Centreville, Delaware.
39°49′16″N 75°37′0″W
Centreville, Delaware Included in the Centreville Historic District
Odd Fellows Building and Auditorium 1912-131975 228-250 Auburn Ave., N.E.
33°45′20″N 84°22′46″W
Atlanta, Georgia Tudor Revival architecture and skyscraper[11] Included in the Sweet Auburn Historic District of Atlanta, Georgia
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Hall (Ashton, Idaho) 19071997 601 Main St.
44°4′18″N 111°26′49″W
Ashton, Idaho Early Commercial architecture[11]
Blackfoot I.O.O.F. Hall 19051979 57 Bridge St.43°11′22″N 112°20′41″W Blackfoot, Idaho
Ada Odd Fellows Temple 19031982 109-11512 N. 9th St.
43°36′58″N 116°12′15″W
Boise, Idaho Renaissance architecture, Late Medieval architecture[11]
Chinese Odd Fellows Building 19111982 610-612 Front St.
43°36′49″N 116°12′7″W
Boise, Idaho Designed by Tourtellotte and Hummel[11]
Buhl IOOF Building 19191984 1014-16 Main St.
42°35′56″N 114°45′35″W
Buhl, Idaho Benjamin Morgan Nisbet designed; Early Commercial architecture, Chicago style[11]
Caldwell Odd Fellow Home for the Aged 19201982 N. 14th Ave.
43°40′0″N 116°40′20″W
Caldwell, Idaho Tourtellotte and Hummel-designed; Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture, Second Renaissance Revival architecture[11]
I.O.O.F. Hall
(Challis, Idaho)
18961980 521 Main Ave.
44°30′17″N 114°13′59″W
Challis, Idaho Queen Anne[11]
I.O.O.F. Building
(Idaho Falls, Idaho)
19091984 393 N. Park Ave.
43°52′28″N 112°2′49″W
Idaho Falls, Idaho Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Montpelier Odd Fellows Hall 18981978 843 Washington St.
42°19′2″N 111°18′27″W
Montpelier, Idaho Renaissance architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Salmon, Idaho) 18741978 516 Main St.
45°10′32″N 113°53′32″W
Salmon, Idaho Greek Revival architecture[11]
Salmon Odd Fellows Hall 19071978 510-514 Main St.
45°10′32″N 113°53′32″W
Salmon, Idaho Classical Revival architecture[11]
Polo Independent Order of Odd Fellows Lodge No. 197 19022004 117 W. Mason St.
41°59′13″N 89°34′38″W
Polo, Illinois Classical Revival
Calumet Lodge IOOF Lodge No. 601 1916 177-79 State St. Hammond, Indiana
Hall of Tell City Lodge, No. 206, IOOF 18941992 701 Main St.
37°57′3″N 86°46′12″W
Tell City, Indiana Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Palace Lodge 18921984 Center and Main Sts.
38°22′58″N 87°12′57″W
Winslow, Indiana Joint project of local Odd Fellows and Knights of Pythias chapters.
Cedar Falls Independent Order of Odd Fellows 19021997 401-403 Main St.
42°32′5″N 92°26′41″W
Cedar Falls, Iowa Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture[11]
Wupperman Block/I.O.O.F. Hall 18591983 508-512 Brady St.
41°31′30″N 90°34′26″W
Davenport, Iowa Renaissance Revival architecture[11]
I.O.O.F. Hall (Garnavillo, Iowa) 18601979 Centre St.
42°52′5″N 91°14′10″W
Garnavillo, Iowa Greek Revival architecture[11]
IOOF Building (Lisbon, Iowa) 1900? 122 W. Main St
41°55′17″N 91°23′11″W
Lisbon, Iowa Currently owned by a medical equipment company.
IOOF Building (Maquoketa, Iowa) 18861991 103 N. Main
42°4′9″N 90°39′54″W
Maquoketa, Iowa Late Victorian architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Monticello, Iowa) 18711985 203 W. 1st St.
42°14′16″N 91°11′27″W
Monticello, Iowa Italianate architecture[11]
Onawa IOOF Opera House 19071990 1023 Tenth Ave.
42°1′32″N 90°5′47″W
Onawa, Iowa Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Troy Mills, Iowa) 19001985 Troy Mills Rd.
42°17′20″N 91°40′57″W
Troy Mills, Iowa Italianate architecture[11]
IOOF Lodge (Alton, Kansas) 18852002 Jct. of Nicholas and Mill Sts.
39°27′21″N 98°56′53″W
Alton, Kansas NRHP-listed[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Covington, Kentucky) 18561980 Fifth Street and Madison Avenue
39°5′9.07″N 84°30′37.75″W
Covington, Kentucky Center of Covington's civic and political life for most of the Victorian era. When the American Civil War ended, victorious Union General Ulysses S. Grant was honored at a reception there.
Odd Fellows Temple (Lexington, Kentucky) 18701980 115-119 W. Main St.
38°2′48″N 84°29′52″W
Lexington, Kentucky Designed or built by Cincinnatus Shryock, with Second Empire architecture, Italianate architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Temple (Frankfort, Kentucky) 18711982 313-319 St. Clair St.
38°2′48″N 84°29′52″W
Frankfort, Kentucky Built by Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Capital Lodge #6, with Second Empire architecture, Italianate architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Building (Owensboro, Kentucky) 18951986 200-204 W. Third St.
37°46′24″N 87°6′44″W
Owensboro, Kentucky Beaux Arts architecture, Italian Renaissance architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Building (Pikeville, Kentucky) 19151984 333 2nd St.
37°28′50″N 82°31′6″W
Pikeville, Kentucky Served as a warehouse and as a business[11]
Brooklin IOOF Hall 18961990 SR 175
44°15′55″N 68°34′51″W
Brooklin, Maine Second Empire architecture[11]
Odd Fellows-Rebekah Hall (Cornish, Maine) 19021983 High St.
43°48′14″N 70°48′12″W
Cornish, Maine architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Block (Lewiston, Maine) 18761986 182-190 Lisbon Street
44°5′44″N 70°13′1″W
Lewiston, Maine Gothic architecture[11]
Star of Hope Lodge 18851982 Main St.
44°2′52″N 68°49′59″W
Vinalhaven, Maine Second Empire
West Paris Lodge No. 15, I.O.O.F. 1876-802012 221 Main Street
44°19′33″N 70°34′21″W
West Paris, Maine Italianate architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Baltimore, 1831) 1831 30 North Gay St Baltimore, Maryland First Odd Fellows Hall in the United States. Demolished in 1890.
Odd Fellows Hall (Baltimore, 1891) 18911980 300 Cathedral St.
39°17′35″N 76°37′2″W
Baltimore, Maryland Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Lodge (Bel Air, Maryland) 18521975 21 Pennsylvania Ave.
39°32′13″N 76°20′56″W
Bel Air, Maryland Greek Revival architecture[11]
Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, Sandy Spring Lodge #6430 1920s 1308 Olney-Sandy Spring Rd
39°8′52.58″N 77°1′52.96″W
Sandy Spring, Maryland "Two-story, gable-fronted frame structure that is an important part of the area's African American history. Designated a Preserve America Steward in August 2010."[14]
Odd Fellows' Hall (Beverly, Massachusetts) 18741978 184-192 Cabot Street
42°32′52.4″N 70°52′45.16″W
Beverly, Massachusetts Gothic architecture[11]
Odd Fellows' Hall (Buckland, Massachusetts) 18771979 1-5 State Street
42°36′14″N 72°44′23″W
Buckland, Massachusetts [11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Cambridge, Massachusetts) 18841982 536 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, Massachusetts Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Building (Malden, Massachusetts) 19071988 442 Main Street
42°25′45″N 71°4′2″W
Malden, Massachusetts Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture, Other architecture[11]
Odd Fellows' Home (Worcester, Massachusetts) 18901980 40 Randolph Rd.
42°17′56″N 71°47′51″W
Worcester, Massachusetts Late Victorian architecture[11]
Clark Memorial Hall 18881985 120–124 S. Winter St.
41°53′55″N 84°02′18″W
Adrian, Michigan Also known as the Adrian I.O.O.F. Hall, built for the Adrian Lodge of the Odd Fellowship branch of the Odd Fellows. Victorian architecture.
I.O.O.F. Centennial Building 18762015 150 E. Chisholm St.
45°03′40″N 83°25′57″W
Alpena, Michigan Italianate architecture
Odd Fellows Valley Lodge No. 189 Building ?2010 1900 Broadway Ave.
43°34′11″N 83°53′38″W
Bay City, Michigan
Detroit Odd Fellows Temple 1874 1208 Randoph St. Detroit, Michigan Victorian architecture, 1980 NRHP-listed part of district[11]
Spiritual Israel Church and Its Army Temple 19112014 9375 Amity St.
42°21′52″N 82°59′13″W
Detroit, Michigan Classical Revival architecture
Wyandotte Odd Fellows Temple 19112009 81 Chestnut St.
42°12′19″N 83°8′58″W
Wyandotte, Michigan [11]
IOOF Hall (NE Minneapolis) 1891 401 East Hennepin Ave. Minneapolis, Minnesota Development of historic storefronts as a part of general rehabilitation of a three-story fraternal block built in 1891 at 401 East Hennepin Avenue near downtown Minneapolis.[15]
Strangers Refuge Lodge Number 74, IOOF 19022006 119 S. Broadway Ave.
43°53′35″N 93°29′36″W
New Richland, Minnesota Has served as a meeting hall, as an auditorium, as a music facility, and as a theater[11]
Iron Lodge No. 107. I.O.O.F. 1873 2013 NRHP-listed 133 N. Main St.37°35′59″N 90°37′48″W Ironton, Missouri Three-story brick building with Italianate and Greek Revival design elements. Built to serve primarily as a meeting place for fraternal lodges.
IOOF Liberty Lodge No. 49 19231992 16-18 E. Franklin St.
39°14′50″N 94°25′10″W
Liberty, Missouri Moderne architecture, Early 20th-century commercial architecture[11]
St. Charles Odd Fellows Hall 18781987 117 S. Main
38°46′50″N 90°28′54″W
St. Charles, Missouri Second Empire architecture[11]
IOOF Hall and Fromberg Co-operative Mercantile Building 19061993 123 W. River St.
45°23′31″N 108°54′31″W
Fromberg, Montana Has served as a department store and as a meeting hall[11]
IOOF Hall (Stevensville, Montana) 19121991 217-219 Main St.
46°30′37″N 114°5′35″W
Stevensville, Montana [11]
IOOF Lodge (Thompson Falls, Montana) ?1986 520 Main St.
47°35′35″N 115°20′31″W
Thompson Falls, Montana [11]
IOOF Hall and Opera House 19131988 Main St.


40°19′21″N 98°35′42″W

Bladen, Nebraska [11]
IOOF Temple Building 18941987 523 E St.
40°8′14″N 97°10′47″W
Fairbury, Nebraska Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
IOOF Opera House 18931988 N. Third and B Sts.
40°52′46″N 97°53′9″W
Hampton, Nebraska A two-part commercial block building.[11]
Austin Masonic and Odd Fellows Hall 18672003 105 Main St.
39°29′34″N 117°4′10″W
Austin, Nevada Has served as a meeting hall and as a business[11]
I.O.O.F. Building, Mason Valley 1914 1983 1 S. Main St.
38°59′2″N 119°10′11″W
Yerington, Nevada NRHP-listed
Mohegan Manor 1910 58 Oswego Street
43°9′33.75″N 76°19′57.37″W
Baldwinsville, New York Designed by Ward Wellington Ward as an Odd Fellows hall.
IOOF Hall (Hunter, New York) 19132002 6325 Main St.
42°12′43″N 74°13′3″W
Hunter, New York Queen Anne[11]
Nathan Comstock Jr. House 1823–1829, 1907 299 Old Niagara Road
42°11′14″N 78°40′47″W
Lockport, New York Greek Revival architecture; housed the Odd Fellows Orphanage from 1907 to 1944.[16][17]
Odd Fellows Hall (New York, New York) 18471983 165-171 Grand Street
40°43′11″N 73°59′53″W
New York, New York Italianate, Queen Anne, Anglo-Italianate architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Lodge and Temple 18872014 212 Ash St., 823 N. Townsend St.
43°03′38″N 76°09′53″W
Syracuse, New York Romanesque Revival[18]
Odd Fellows Lodge (Goldsboro, North Carolina) 19011978 111-115 N. John St.
35°22′59″N 77°59′27″W
Goldsboro, North Carolina Classical Revival architecture, Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Building (Raleigh, North Carolina) 19231997 19 W Hargett St.
35°46′40″N 78°38′24″W
Raleigh, North Carolina Skyscraper with Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements architecture, Classical Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Block (Grand Forks, North Dakota) 18881982 23-25 S. 4th St.
47°55′26″N 97°1′47″W
Grand Forks, North Dakota Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Chester Town Hall (Chesterville, Ohio) 18671979 Sandusky and Short Sts.
40°28′48″N 82°40′57″W
Chesterville, Ohio Italianate architecture[11] Built as an Odd Fellows Hall
Odd Fellows Hall (Hilliard, Ohio) 18831988 4065 Main St.
40°2′5″N 83°9′32″W
Hilliard, Ohio Italianate architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Temple (East Liverpool, Ohio) 19071985 120 W. Sixth St.
40°37′16″N 80°34′50″W
East Liverpool, Ohio [11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Portsmouth, Ohio) 18711987 500-506 Court St.
38°44′3″N 83°0′2″W
Portsmouth, Ohio Italianate architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Sandusky, Ohio) 18892003 231 West Washington Row
Sandusky, Ohio Queen Anne, Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Relief Lodge No. 148 18691999 405 South Main Street
39°33′07″N 84°13′59″W
Springboro, Ohio Italianate[11]
Odd Fellows' Home for Orphans, Indigent and Aged 18981980 404 E. McCreight Ave.
39°56′23″N 83°47′59″W
Springfield, Ohio Renaissance Revival architecture, Chateauesque architecture[11]
Aline IOOF Lodge No. 263 19301984 Off Main and Broadway
36°30′35″N 98°26′58″W
Aline, Oklahoma One of four NRHP-listed IOOF buildings in the county[11][19]
I.O.O.F. Hall (Alva, Oklahoma) 19051984 527 Barnes St.
36°48′12″N 98°39′59″W
Alva, Oklahoma Plains Commercial architecture[11]
I.O.O.F. Building of Buffalo 19171983 110 W. Turner St.
36°50′07″N 99°37′53″W
Buffalo, Oklahoma Plains Commercial architecture[11]
Carmen IOOF Home 19061984
36°35′43″N 98°27′43″W
near Carmen, Oklahoma [11][19]
Carmen IOOF Lodge No. 84 19021984 Main and 4th St.
36°34′45″N 98°27′30″W
Carmen, Oklahoma Served as a professional building, as a clubhouse, and as a specialty store[11][19]
Oklahoma Odd Fellows Home at Checotah 19022001 211 West North St.
35°28′46″N 101°31′15″W
Checotah, Oklahoma Romanesque Revival architecture, Bungalow/Craftsman architecture[11]
Cherokee IOOF Lodge No. 219 19311984 Grand Ave. and 2nd St.
36°45′23″N 98°21′25″W
Cherokee, Oklahoma One of four Alfalfa County Odd Fellows buildings that were subject of a 1983 study.[11][19]
Adams Odd Fellows Hall 18861994 190 Main St.
45°46′3″N 118°33′44″W
Adams, Oregon Italianate architecture[11]
IOOF Building (Ashland, Oregon) 18791978 49-57 N. Main St.
42°11′50″N 122°42′54″W
Ashland, Oregon Served as a clubhouse and as a specialty store[11]
Enterprise I.O.O.F. Hall 19202012 105 NE 1st St.
45°25′34″N 117°16′33″W
Enterprise, Oregon
Harrisburg Odd Fellows Hall 18821992 190 Smith St.
44°16′20″N 123°10′12″W
Harrisburg, Oregon Italianate architecture[11]
IOOF-Paris Fair Building 19061990 315 Oak St.
45°42′30″N 121°31′18″W
Hood River, Oregon Early Commercial architecture[11]
Lake Oswego Odd Fellows Hall 18901979 Durham and Church Sts.
45°24′50″N 122°39′39″W
Lake Oswego, Oregon Has served as a professional building, as a clubhouse, as a meeting hall, and as a specialty store[11]
Odd Fellows Building (Portland, Oregon) 19221980 1019 SW 10th Ave.
45°31′5″N 122°40′56″W
Portland, Oregon Late Gothic Revival architecture[11]
Chemeketa Lodge No. 1 Odd Fellows Buildings 19001988 185-195 High St. NE
44°56′26.08″N 123°2′14.03″W
Salem, Oregon Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
Loyal Order of Odd Fellows 1860 5619 Germantown Ave.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Significant contribution to the NRHP Colonial Germantown Historic District - Note: Not an IOOF building.
Morgantown Odd Fellows Hall 1868 3172-3176 Main Street
Morgantown, Pennsylvania Contributing building in Morgantown Historic District - District NRHP-listed 1995
Strasburg Odd Fellows 1856 Strasburg Historic District
Strasburg, Pennsylvania In the NRHP Strasburg Historic District
Oddfellows' Hall (East Providence, Rhode Island) 18891980 Warren Avenue
41°49′1″N 71°22′56″W
East Providence, Rhode Island Shingle Style architecture
Odd Fellows Home of Dell Rapids 19102010 100 W. 10th St.
Dell Rapids, South Dakota [20]
IOOF Hall (Fairburn, South Dakota) 19171995 Main St.
43°41′08″N 103°12′39″W
Fairburn, South Dakota Contributing building in Fairburn Historic Commercial District
Odd Fellows Building (Gary, South Dakota) 18981976 Main St.
44°47′34″N 96°27′24″W
Gary, South Dakota Has served as a clubhouse and as a meeting hall[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Beaver, Utah) 19031983 33-35 N. Main St.
38°16′29″N 112°38′29″W
Beaver, Utah Early Commercial architecture[11]
IOOF Relief Home 18901984 232 Woodside Ave.
40°38′27″N 111°29′41″W
Park City, Utah [11]
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Hall (Salt Lake City, Utah) 18911977 39 W. Market St.
40°45′41″N 111°53′30″W
Salt Lake City, Utah Richardsonian Romanesque architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Alexandria, Virginia) ?2004 411 S. Columbus St.
38°48′11.3″N 77°2′57.24″W
Alexandria, Virginia Second Empire architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Blacksburg, Virginia) 19052005 203 Gilbert St.
37°14′9″N 80°25′16″W
Blacksburg, Virginia Historically a meeting hall[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Occoquan, Virginia) 1889
Occoquan, Virginia
Independent Order of Odd Fellows (IOOF) Hall No. 148 18951999 3940 Tolt Ave.
47°38′39″N 121°54′51″W
Carnation, Washington [11]
Cheney Odd Fellows Hall ?1990 321 First St.
47°29′12″N 117°34′30″W
Cheney, Washington Late Victorian architecture, vernacular commercial architecture[11]
Opera House and IOOF Lodge ?1997 151 W. 1st Ave.
48°32′40″N 117°54′18″W
Colville, Washington Classical Revival architecture[11]
IOOF Hall, Everett, Washington ?1912 2813-2815 Wetmore Avenue Everett, Washington Contributing building in Hewitt Avenue Historic District[21]:4–5
Oddfellows Hall (Seattle, Washington) ? East Pine and 10th Streets
47°36′54.14″N 122°19′11.18″W
Seattle, Washington Renaissance Revival architecture;[22] a "cultural nucleus and point of convergence for community and arts organizations"[23]
Stanwood IOOF Public Hall 19022002 27128 102nd Ave. NW
48°14′35″N 122°22′11″W
Stanwood, Washington Western falsefront architecture[11]
Vashon Odd Fellows Hall 1912 19704 Vashon Highway SW
Vashon Island, Washington Built in 1912, designated a King County and/or local landmark in 1985[24]
IOOF Lodge Building (Marlinton, West Virginia) 19052000 Jct. of 8th St. and Second Ave.
38°16′40″N 80°5′38″W
Marlinton, West Virginia Italianate architecture[11]
IOOF Lodge Building (Shinnston, West Virginia) 19061998 In Shinnston Historic District at corner of Pike and Walnut Streets
39°23′43″N 80°18′5″W
Shinnston, West Virginia [11]
Odd Fellows Temple Building (Welch, West Virginia) 19291992 43-63 Mc Dowell St
37°25′52″N 81°35′07″W
Welch, West Virginia Art Deco architecture[11]
Sharon Lodge No. 28 IOOF 18971982 316 5th St.
39°15′55″N 81°33′37″W
Parkersburg, West Virginia Romanesque Revival architecture[11]
I.O.O.F. Lodge # 329 Building (Iuka, West Virginia) 1882 Laurel Run Rd.
39°30′53.6″N 80°47′23.5″W
Iuka, West Virginia Built originally as a one-room school with a Lodge upstairs; a new school was built in 1925, and the Board of Education sold the building to Lodge #329, and the bottom floor (school room) was converted into a country store. The Lodge closed in 1945, when it consolidated with Middlebourne Lodge #69. The building has been abandoned for several years and is in very deteriorated shape.
Former Odd Fellows Building 1890s 220 Fourth Avenue West Ashland, Wisconsin Romanesque Revival architecture, although re-sided with modern aluminum siding. Currently used as a commercial business building.
Independent Order of Odd Fellows-Lodge No. 189 Building 18871999 1335 Main St.
45°5′42″N 87°37′18″W
Marinette, Wisconsin Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Hall (Big Horn, Wyoming) 18941980 Jackson St.
44°40′46″N 106°59′27″W
Big Horn, Wyoming [11]
Odd Fellows Building (Casper, Wyoming) 1952 136 S. Wolcott St.
42°51′5″N 106°19′27″W
Casper, Wyoming [11]

Cemeteries

Building
Image estab.NRHP
listed
LocationCity, state Description
Odd Fellows Cemetery (San Francisco, California) ?
San Francisco, California Former cemetery; location of the Neptune Society Columbarium
Greenlawn Memorial Park (Colma, California) 1933 1100 El Camino Real Colma, California In 1933, 26,000 bodies from the Oddfellows Cemetery in San Francisco were moved here. San Francisco had previously passed an ordinance to prohibit the sale of cemetery lots or permit any further burials within the city.
Odd Fellows Cemetery (Sonora, California) 1856
Sonora, California Currently reported in disrepair.[25]
Odd Fellows Rest Cemetery 18491980 Canal Street & City Park Avenue
29°58′53″N 90°6′39″W
New Orleans, Louisiana Renaissance architecture, Exotic Revival architecture[11]
Odd Fellows and Confederate Cemetery ?1988 Corner of Cemetery and Commerce Sts.
33°46′28″N 89°48′39″W
Grenada, Mississippi Gothic architecture, Romanesque Revival architecture, Classical architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Cemetery (Starkville, Mississippi) ?1990 Jct. of US 82 and Henderson St.
33°28′0″N 88°49′15″W
Starkville, Mississippi [11]
Odd Fellows' Cemetery ? Along Round Bottom Rd.
39°7′38.1″N 84°21′20.5″W
Near Newtown, Ohio Notable for being site of Odd Fellows' Cemetery Mound, an ancient Indian mound and an NRHP-listed archeological site
Medford IOOF Cemetery 18901989 Siskiyou Blvd. at Highland Dr.
Medford, Oregon Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals architecture, Art Deco architecture, Modernistic architecture[11]
Odd Fellows Cemetery 1849 24th and Diamond Streets
39°59′12.5″N 75°10′21.99″W
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Acquired by the Philadelphia Housing Authority in 1950 for construction of a housing project; burials were re-interred at other Odd Fellows cemeteries
Odd Fellows Cemetery Plot (of Mount Hope Cemetery) about 1900 Along Sanborn Avenue Ashland, Wisconsin The Odd Fellows Section, located near the center of Mount Hope Cemetery

References

  1. Note there are hundreds of Odd Fellows buildings in the state of California, alone, as documented by sewkind at Panoramio.Photos of Odd Fellows Lodges in California Archived 2016-10-24 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. The retirement homes among the list are:
  3. "Baroona Labor Hall (entry 600277)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  4. "Cook Shire Hall (entry 601704)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  5. "Glennie Hall (entry 601505)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  6. "Oddfellows Home Hotel (former) (entry 602199)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  7. IOOF(SA), home page.
  8. "Wanslea". State Heritage, Western Australia.
  9. Google translation of fich.dk page
  10. Kong Hroar Lodge nr. 26, Roskilde, Denmark.
  11. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  12. Carmel Barry-Schweyer (May 5, 2011). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Oddfellows Hall / International Order of Oddfellows Hall / IOOF Hall" (PDF). Retrieved October 6, 2016.
  13. NPS, Asset Detail, Ferndale Main Street https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/93001461>
  14. "Advisory Council on Historic Preservation: Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, Sandy Spring Lodge #6430". ACHP.gov. Retrieved June 18, 2019. ...two-story, gable-fronted frame structure that is an important part of the area's African American history. Designated a Preserve America Steward in August 2010.
  15. Technologies, Tom Challey, TC. "YHR Partners, Ltd. - Moorhead, Minnesota". www.yhr.com. Retrieved 2017-10-21.
  16. "National Register of Historic Places". National Park Service. 2011-10-07.
  17. Virginia L. Bartos (June 2011). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Nathan Comstock Jr. House". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Archived from the original on 7 July 2015. Retrieved 21 May 2011. See also: "Accompanying 10 photos".
  18. "National Register of Historic Places Listings". Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 4/07/14 through 4/11/14. National Park Service. 2014-04-18.
  19. George Otey (1983). "IOOF Buildings in Alfalfa County Thematic Resources". National Park Service. Retrieved 12 October 2010.
  20. new NRHP listings
  21. Sonja Sokol Fürész (August 25, 2010). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Hewitt Avenue Historic District". City of Everett website.
  22. Woodridge, Sally B.; Roger Montgomery (1980). A Guide to Architecture in Washington State. University of Washington Press. p. 146. ISBN 0295957794.
  23. Brendan Kiley (October 24, 2007). "What's Going to Happen to Oddfellows Hall? Three Real Estate Deals and What They Mean for Seattle Theater". Retrieved October 2, 2010.
  24. "King County and Local Landmarks List". Technical Paper No. 6. King County.
  25. Oddfellows cemetery victim of vandals (in Sonora, CA)
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