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The Scottish Rite Dormitory (SRD) is a private women's dorm for the University of Texas built and operated by the Scottish rite of Freemasons in Austin, Texas.Located just north of campus on 27th Street and Whitis Avenue, the colonial revival style building was completed in 1922 during a housing shortage on campus and was intended to provide housing for the daughters and relatives of Master ...
Address Constructed Hart Furniture Building: 1933 Elm Street: 1888 Dallas Scottish Rite Temple: 500 S. Harwood Street: 1910-1913 First Presbyterian Church: 401 S. Harwood Street: 1912, 1948 Dallas Municipal Building and Annex: 106 S. Harwood Street: 1914, 1954 Majestic Theatre: 1923 Elm Street: 1920 Lone Star Gas Company (south building) 1915 ...
The Dallas Scottish Rite Temple is a monumental structure in the Farmers Market District of downtown Dallas, Texas.Constructed in 1913 as an official headquarters for use by the Scottish Rite Masons and other local Masonic lodges, it is a fine example of early 20th century Beaux Arts Classical architecture in Texas.
Bantz and Vela spent a whopping 10 hours decorating their door room in a building that has been nicknamed "Scary" Sterry Hall. While the renovation came at a price -- a whopping $2,400 to be exact ...
The Dallas Downtown Historic District is a 555-acre (225 ha) area in downtown Dallas, Texas, United States, that was designated a historic district in 2006 and expanded in 2009 to preserve the diverse architectural history of the area.
Scottish Rite Temple: 1922 built 1984 NRHP-listed 351 St. Francis Street: Mobile, Alabama: Egyptian Revival building known previously as Scottish Rite Temple, this building housed a Scottish Rite chapter. It has been sold and converted into a banqueting venue known as "The Temple Downtown.
Fort Worth Scottish Rite (Valley of Fort Worth) [15] Texas Chapter #362, Royal Arch Masons of Texas [16] Texas Council #321, Royal and Select Masters of Texas [17] Worth Commandery #19, Knights Templar [18] Moslah Shriners [19] El Texa Grotto M.O.V.P.E.R. [20] H. Malvern Marks Chapter, Order of DeMolay [21]
It was designed by Dallas architect Henry Coke Knight. [1] The building sits adjacent to the historic Neill-Cochran House (1855) and is a prominent feature of the Judge's Hill neighborhood, to the west of the University of Texas. The Mansion was added to the National Register of Historic Places on October 24, 1985.