Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Odd Fellows Building in Raleigh, North Carolina, also known as the Commerce Building, is a 10-story skyscraper built in 1923. It reflects Late 19th and Early 20th Century American Movements architecture and Classical Revival architecture and consists of the classic base-shaft-capital design.
Location City, state Notes Odd Fellows Home (Gainesville, Florida) 1893 built Gainesville, Florida "Odd Fellows Home was built in 1893 as a tuberculosis sanatorium for Odd Fellows and Rebekahs. It was subsequently used as a girls school and as the city hospital. In 1914 it became a rest home for aged Odd Fellows and an orphanage.
The Odd Fellows Lodge is a historic Odd Fellows clubhouse located at Goldsboro, Wayne County, North Carolina. It was designed by E.G. Porter in Classical Revival and Romanesque styles. It was built in 1906, and is a three-story brick building. It served historically as a clubhouse and as a specialty store. [2]
Odd Fellows Lodge (Bel Air, Maryland), listed on the NRHP in Maryland; Odd Fellows Lodge and Temple, listed on the NRHP in New York; IOOF Lodge (Thompson Falls, Montana), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Sanders County, Montana; Odd Fellows Lodge (Goldsboro, North Carolina), listed on the NRHP in North Carolina
Odd Fellows Hall, Independent Order of Odd Fellows Building, IOOF Building, Odd Fellows Lodge and similar terms are phrases used to refer to buildings that house chapters of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows fraternal organization. More specifically, these terms may refer to:
The Wilson Central Business–Tobacco Warehouse District is a national historic district located at Wilson, Wilson County, North Carolina. It encompasses 152 contributing buildings, 20 contributing sites, and 2 contributing structures in the central business district of Wilson.
Odd Fellows Building may refer to: in the United States Odd Fellows Building (Red Bluff, California) , listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP)
Subsequently, the odd fellows became religiously and politically independent. Prince George the Prince of Wales, later King George IV of the United Kingdom (1762–1830), admitted in 1780, was the first documented of many odd fellows to also adhere to freemasonry; both societies remained mutually independent.