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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.
Odd Fellows buildings in the United States (37 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Odd Fellows buildings" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.
The hall was built in 1864 in Palazzo style with red brick and yellow-grey brick walls and a Welsh slate roof. It is a two storey building, the upper floor of which is divided into five bays on its long side and three on its narrow side - these bays are divided by articulated yellow-grey brick pilasters. The ground floor has four-pane segmented ...
An historic photo of the Odd Fellows building on Sale Street in downtown Ellettsville. The beautiful cursive-written records from the 1890s are bound in moldy leather covers.
The I.O.O.F. Hall in Woodbridge, California is a historic Odd Fellows hall and commercial block building that was built in 1861 and expanded in 1874 in Early Commercial architectural style. It served historically as a clubhouse and as a business. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. [1] [2]
The Odd Fellows' Hall was dedicated on April 26, 1831. A procession was formed at the Exchange Building and marched to Trinity Church, where an oration was delivered by Ridgely and a choir performed a musical selection. The procession then marched to the hall, where the dedication ceremony took place and Thomas Yates Walsh made a speech. The ...
The Cedar Falls Independent Order of Odd Fellows Temple, in Cedar Falls, Iowa, also known as Odd Fellows Temple or 4th and Main Building, is an Independent Order of Odd Fellows building that was built during 1901–02. It is a 3 + 1 ⁄ 2-story building on a 46 feet (14 m) by 132 feet (40 m) base.
The Odd Fellows Hall is a building at 165–171 Grand Street between Centre and Baxter Streets, in the Little Italy and SoHo neighborhoods of Manhattan, New York City.It was built in 1847–1848 and designed by the firm of Trench & Snook in the Italianate style, one of the city's earliest structures in this style, which Joseph Trench had brought to New York with his design for 280 Broadway in ...