El Paso Scottish Rite turns 100 years old.

El Paso Scottish Rite turns 100 years old.
El Paso Scottish Rite building turns 100 years old. Masonry in El Paso began in 1852. Seven members of El Paso Lodge No. 130 traveled on horseback to Alamo Lodge No. 44 located in San Antonio, Texas. The purpose was to request a charter for blue or symbolic lodge. On January 21, 1854, the lodge obtained its charter and began to work. The El Paso Scottish Rite originally met in the masonic lodge belonging to 130. The growth of the membership and monthly rent was an impetus to look to the horizon and build for the future. Albert Pike visited El Paso and commissioned furniture that is at the El Paso Scottish Rite. Furthermore, it suspended operations during the Civil War. The original temple plans were drawn by hand, by member Gustavus Trost (of the renowned architectural firm Trost & Trost). However, the architectural firm that built the temple was Hubbell and Green of Dallas, Texas. It was built as a “early revival style” by Robert E. McKee Construction Company. The building took a total of nine months to complete. The building cost was $175,000 at the time. Accounting for inflation, in today’s money, it would be in the millions of dollars to build. It is an almost literal replica of the Pan-American building in Washington D.C. by architect Paul Phillippe Cret. The sphinxes that guard the entrance were cast in Perth Amboy, New Jersey by the Federal-Seaboard Terra Cotta Company. The final placement was on September 26, 1966. El Paso was the first one to have sphinxes and arranged for another pair to be given by the El Paso Bodies to the Waco Consistory. The sphinxes are the largest single cast terra-cotta sculptures in the world. The cornerstone laying had the mayor and other civic leaders (all who were Scottish Rite masons). In addition, it brought masonic leaders from all over the world. The El Paso Scottish Rite owns the theatre, museum and lodge room. A few bodies rent from the Scottish Rite and are mere tenants. The membership is a list that reads like a who’s who of masonry. In the words of Lee Lockwood, “We believe in the great principles of free government, of free-speech. The equality of all men before the law. The sanctity of the home. The right to worship God according to the dictates of one’s own conscience and that through fraternity, tolerance and truth can the happiness of mankind be achieved.”
Report this entry
More from the same community-collection
The Devil you Say! The Saintly and not so Saintly in Folk Art
The Devil you Say! The Saintly and not so Saintly, in Folk Art ...
The Devil you Say! The Saintly and not so Saintly in Folk Art
The Devil you Say! The Saintly and not so Saintly, in Folk Art ...
Roberto Mata Departs Sierra after Covid
Roberto Mata in 2020 on the respirator 30 days and then ...
Mayor Don Henderson and Sugar Goodman El Paso, TX 1976
Mayor Don Henderson and Sugar Goodman El Paso, TX 1976
Amelia, nicknamed Sugar, Goodman in 1976
Friend congratulates Amelia, nicknamed Sugar, Goodman on ...
Curt Warren, jazz professor, at funeral of Felix Antoine 1996
Kurt Warren, jazz professor, El Paso, TX at funeral of Felix ...
Women Attend Historical Society Hall of Honor FALL 2021
Attendees at the Historical Society Hall of Honor event on ...
Donald Williams at the Historical Society HoF event
Donald Williams at the Historical Society Hall of Honor banquet ...
Janine Young, writer and historian
Janine Young, writer and historian El Paso County Historical ...
Ginger G. Francis at the Historical Society HoH
Ginger G. Francis graduated the Loretto Academy Class '75. She ...
Hilda Stockmeyer Lewels, civic leader
Hilda Stockmeyer Lewels, civic leader at the November 14, 2021 ...
Downtown Main Library El Paso Texas November 2021
Downtown Main Library El Paso Texas under construction November ...
Gov Ann Richards quote and picture in downtown El Paos
Governor Ann Richards Honored in downtown El Paso, Texas by ...
Steven J. Ross, M. J. Ross, Eva Ross El Paso TX 1986
Steven J. Ross, M. J. Ross, Eva Ross El Paso TX 1986
El Paso's Homegrown: World War II
The homefront of El Paso, Texas was no stranger to war. Between ...