Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Oklahoma Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Oklahoma [10] [147] 1893 [20] 129 [21] 6,000 PHCGM, PHA: United States Oregon Grand Lodge of Oregon [10] [148] 1851 [12] 112 9,203 [13] CGMNA: United States Oregon Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Oregon, Idaho and Montana [10] [149] 1960 [20] 8 [21] 143 PHCGM, PHA: United States Oregon Sons of Haiti Grand Lodge ...
The Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the Caribbean was founded with the assistance of the Prince Hall Grand Lodge of New York. It is based in Christ Church, Barbados, the location of Prince Hall's birth. [22] A monument to Prince Hall has been erected outside the Grand Lodge building. [23]
Prince Hall Conference of Grand Masters 1887 An organization of Prince Hall Affiliated (PHA) Grand Lodge leaders, [16] from 49 Prince Hall Affiliated (PHA) grand lodges. REHFRAM: Rencontres Humanistes et Fraternelles Africaines et Malgaches An organization of African regular and liberal lodges, meeting annually in an African capital. SCIC
Grand Lodge of the Indian Territory - Est. Oct. 6, 1874 (Reestablished in 1892 as Grand Lodge of Oklahoma) [18] Grand Lodge of Wyoming - Est. December 15, 1874 [59] [60] Grand Lodge of Manitoba - Est. May 12, 1875 [61] Grand Lodge of Prince Edward Island - Est. June 23, 1875 [62] Grand Lodge of New Mexico - Est. 1877 [63] Grand Lodge of Arizona ...
NRHP-listed [3] The building serves as the headquarters of the Most Worshipful Union Grand Lodge of Florida and Belize (a Prince Hall Masonic Grand Lodge). [55] 4: Masonic Temple of Citrus Lodge No. 118, F. and A.M. 1910 built 2010 NRHP-listed 111 West Main Street and 95 South Pine Avenue Inverness, Florida: Neoclassical. [3] Vacated by the ...
Social Lodge No. 1, Washington, D.C., Prince Hall Affiliation. [4] ... Grand Orator of the Grand Lodge of Oklahoma from 1918 to 1921 and Grand Master of Oklahoma in ...
Hall was born between 1735 and 1738. [3] [4] [a] His place of birth and parents are also unclear.[5] [b] Hall mentioned in his writings that New England was his homeland.The Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, in its Proceedings of 1906, opted for 1738, relying on a letter from Reverend Jeremy Belknap, a founder of the Massachusetts Historical Society. [5]
For many years the mainstream Grand Lodges did not recognize Prince Hall Freemasonry and considered their Prince Hall Freemasonry irregular, despite the UGLE's approval of their regularity. [citation needed] In the 1980s, [citation needed] many mainstream Grand Lodges began to recognize Prince Hall Grand Lodges as Freemasons.