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.
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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 | Dates | Location | City, state | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baroona Hall | 1883-83-built 1992-QHR-listed[3] |
15-17 Caxton Street, Petrie Terrace 27.4645°S 153.0131°E |
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 |
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 |
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 |
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 | ||
Denmark
Building |
Image | Built | Odd Fellows property | Location | Country | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Odd Fellows Mansion, Copenhagen | 1751 | 1900 | 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 | Built | Odd Fellows property | Location | Country | 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 | 2011 | 2011 | 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 | Built | Odd Fellows property | Location | Country | 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 | Built | Odd Fellows property | Location | Country | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Banér Palace | 18th century | 1922 | Stockholm | Sweden | ||
United States
(ordered by state then city)
Cemeteries
Building |
Image | estab. | NRHP listed | Location | City, 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 | 1849 | 1980 | 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 | 1890 | 1989 | 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
- 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.
- The retirement homes among the list are:
- the Odd Fellows' Home (Worcester, Massachusetts);
- the Carmen IOOF Home and the Oklahoma Odd Fellows Home at Checotah in Oklahoma;
- the Caldwell Odd Fellow Home for the Aged in Idaho;
- the IOOF Relief Home in Utah;
- the Odd Fellows' Home for Orphans, Indigent and Aged in Ohio; and
- the Odd Fellows Home of Dell Rapids, South Dakota.
- "Baroona Labor Hall (entry 600277)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
- "Cook Shire Hall (entry 601704)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
- "Glennie Hall (entry 601505)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
- "Oddfellows Home Hotel (former) (entry 602199)". Queensland Heritage Register. Queensland Heritage Council. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
- IOOF(SA), home page.
- "Wanslea". State Heritage, Western Australia.
- Google translation of fich.dk page
- Kong Hroar Lodge nr. 26, Roskilde, Denmark.
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13. Missing or empty
|url=
(help) - 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.
- NPS, Asset Detail, Ferndale Main Street https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/93001461>
- "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.
- Technologies, Tom Challey, TC. "YHR Partners, Ltd. - Moorhead, Minnesota". www.yhr.com. Retrieved 2017-10-21.
- "National Register of Historic Places". National Park Service. 2011-10-07.
- 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".
- "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.
- George Otey (1983). "IOOF Buildings in Alfalfa County Thematic Resources". National Park Service. Retrieved 12 October 2010.
- new NRHP listings
- Sonja Sokol Fürész (August 25, 2010). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Hewitt Avenue Historic District". City of Everett website.
- Woodridge, Sally B.; Roger Montgomery (1980). A Guide to Architecture in Washington State. University of Washington Press. p. 146. ISBN 0295957794.
- 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.
- "King County and Local Landmarks List". Technical Paper No. 6. King County.
- Oddfellows cemetery victim of vandals (in Sonora, CA)
External links
- Photos of Odd Fellows Lodges in California, photographs taken and collected by sewkind in Panoramio.Com