Tag Archives: lodges

“The Lodge” — Once a Staple of American Life

Last week in this space we looked at two fraternal organizations – Masons and Grange – that have counted millions of Americans among their members, and have played a major role in shaping American life.

But there were MANY more fraternal lodges on the scene, both nationally and locally. What were some of the others, centering our look on Steuben County?

Knights of the Maccabees had “Tents” in Campbell, Canisteo, Bath, Savona, Hammondsport, Jasper, Wayland, Wayne, and Hornell. Ritual and nomenclature were inspired by the Maccabee warriors of ancient Israel, but the insurance aspect fairly quickly overshadowed the fraternal aspect. In 1901, after James Shannon was killed by lightning in his barn on Mount Washington, his wife got a $2000 Maccabees insurance payout.

They were fond of parades, and had substantial halls in Jasper and Hornell. They were whites only, had a Ladies of the Maccabees auxiliary, and endured into the 1990s, but eventually became “just” an insurance company. You’ll find their tents and beehives (for MaccaBEES) on gravestones and cemetery markers.

Knights of Pythias, which still operates worldwide, dates to 1864. Greek legend told of friends Damon and Pythias, each willing to sacrifice his life for the other. We have a photo of the only known Steuben group, in Bath.

Like most fraternal groups, Pythians today are philanthropic, especially supporting the American Cancer Society. Famous Knights include Louis Armstrong, William Jennings Bryan, Nelson Rockefeller, and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Pythian Sisters are the auxiliary, with Pythian Sunshine Girls and Junior Order of Princes of Syracuse for youth. Their FCB symbol (often in a triangle) stands for Friendship, Charity, Benevolence.

Also known by a single group are the Modern Woodmen of America, noted in Hornell in 1883. Originally open to all religions, agnostics, and atheists, the goal was to build community and provide family security, but even well into the 20th century only whites were admitted. They also excluded the actuarily-worrisome, such as city dwellers, miners, railway workers, and aeronauts (sorry, Mr. Curtiss). Philanthropy, insurance, and fraternal life are still Woodmen priorities. A crossed axe and hammer is a common symbol. Sometimes there are very picturesque gravestones in the form of a tree stump, or stumps carved on a traditional stone, but I don’t know of any locally.

Cameron Mills, Hammondsport, Bath, and Wayland had Improved Order of Red Men “Tribes.” Inspired by the Boston Tea Party “Mohawks,” Red Men used pseudo-Indian ranks and terminology. The ladies’ group is the Degree of Pocahontas, with Degree of Anona and Degree of Hiawatha for youth. Founded in 1834, the Red Men are still active as a patriotic fraternity, with Alzheimer’s research as a national charity emphasis. At least three presidents (Harding and both Roosevelts) were Red Men. Their motto is “Freedom, Friendship, Charity.” The abbreviation TOTE (Totem of the Eagle) sometimes appears. There’s still a tribe in Watkins Glen.

Founded in 1877, the Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum had groups in Bath and Hornell. While excluding Asians and atheists, otherwise their male membership was theoretically wide open. Loyal Ladies of the Royal Arcanum were the auxiliary, and the motto was “Mercy, Virtue, Charity.” A crown is a common symbol.

The Knights of Honor, founded in 1873, by 1891 had groups in Addison, Bath, Campbell, Caton, Corning, and Hornell. The Knights had a robust system of sickness and death benefits, and also assisted non-member victims of yellow fever. There seems to be no connection with the computer game of the same name, but the current Knights of Honor stress “a brotherhood of secret knowledge, self-improvement and mutual aid.”

The Ancient Order of United Workmen had groups in Addison, Bath, Canisteo, Erwin, Hornellsville, Howard, and Wayland. Founded in 1868, this fraternity developed insurance and benefits for workingmen – a startling idea at the time. The auxiliary was the Degree of Honor. In its early days, the Order was whites only. They often used the symbol of a shield and anchor.

Independent Order of Odd Fellows had their bicentennial last year. The Daughters of Rebekah are the ladies’ auxiliary, with Theta Rho and Loyal Sons of the Junior Order as youth groups. There are now 10,000 lodges worldwide – none in Steuben, though there were groups in Addison, Avoca, Bath, Canisteo, Cohocton, Corning, Wayland, Hornell, and Woodhull. The 1819 organization did not start out segregated, but split into black and white organizations in 1842. In 1910 African American men founded a lodge of the parallel Grand Union Order of Odd Fellows in Painted Post.

Odd Fellows halls were once prominent features of America’s landscape, including locally… they helped build the old Addison village hall, in exchange for use of the fourth floor. You may find chains of three links depicted on buildings or gravestones, and/or the initials F L T, for Friendship, Love, and Truth. The initials I.O.O.F. are also found, while “Rebekahs” or “Daughters of Rebekah” appear on a great many gravestones. Eleanor Roosevelt was a Rebekah, while Franklin was a Fellow, along with five other presidents going back to Buchanan. So were Robert Byrd, Charlie Chaplin, Charles A. Lindbergh, and Wyatt Earp. The closest lodge today is in Geneva.

The great days of “joining” seem to be over, and with them has passed the heyday of “the lodge.” But not too long ago, the lodge loomed large in the hearts and lives of Americans.

Masons and Grangers

Americans used to be “joiners.” In the days when there wasn’t much social safety net, and you couldn’t even call a fire truck or an ambulance from the next village, you depended on your neighbors, and they depended on you. You also socialized with them, whether you liked them or not.
While some joined churches, fire companies, or literary clubs, many Americans enthusiastically signed up for fraternal groups. Besides their social function they provided for mutual aid and benefit… especially for sickness and funerals, which could quickly ruin a family. Groups often also assisted non-members in the community.
Many groups espoused a generic religiosity, and for some members that substituted for creed-driven denominations. Because of that vagueness, the secrecy, and the fear of lodges becoming political and economic power bases, some church denominations banned their members from joining. An early Bath mob attacked the Masonic lodge, burning their records in the alley and putting them out of business for decades.
Most groups enjoyed exotic regalia, portentous titles, and secret ceremonies, adding a dimension of entertainment to a community-service organization. This also entertained non-members, and “the lodge” became a go-to staple of comedy.
Unfortunately the secret aspects created a vacuum which suspicious, frightened, or hostile imaginations hastened to fill. Many early leaders of the United States were Freemasons, as were many early leaders of Mormonism, and of the French Revolution. An entire industry emerged to “reveal” (or invent) conspiracies by the secret societies.
Most groups were male only (with ladies’ auxiliaries), and whites only – though some had companion African Americans groups. The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s drew on long-standing lodges for its organization and practice. Some groups partnered with the Klan to sell real estate for whites-only planned developments in the Florida Land Boom.
Here in our area, the two biggest lodges were Masons and Grange.
Francis McDowell of Wayne was one of eight founders of the National Grange, and Grange listed 44 Steuben branches in their 1935 directory. The wheat sheaf is their symbol, and the words P of H (Patrons of Husbandry) also appear. Grange was co-ed from the start, and the youth arm is Junior Grange. Franklin Roosevelt, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Norman Rockwell were Grangers.
Looking just at Steuben County, the national website lists current Granges in Addison, North Cameron, Bath, Towlesville, Canisteo, Stephens Mills, and Wheeler, plus the county-level Pomona Grange. Grange has a strong presence at almost every county fair in America, and they operate the Steuben County Dairy Festival. You don’t have to be a farmer to be in Grange, but the association has been so strong that numbers have dwindled along with the agricultural population – locally and nationwide, many Granges are endangered.
Freemasonry (of various stripes) goes back to the earliest days of our region’s white occupancy. The 1891 Steuben County directory showed 28 groups, including nine (!) in Hornellsville and one each in such small towns as Rathbone, Troupsburg, Dansville, Greenwood, and Woodull. The nymasons.org site currently lists lodges in Avoca, Addison, Corning-Painted Post, Bath, Hammondsport (Glenn Curtiss was a member), South Dansville-Wayland, and Greenwood. They have their own building at Steuben County Fairgrounds, but the former Scottish Rite Cathedral in Corning is probably our most prominent Masonic feature.
So prevalent was Masonry that its terminology became common speech – hoodwink, on the level, on the square, and third degree all started out in the lodge.
There have been at least 14 Masonic presidents, from Washington to Ford. Order of the Eastern Star is the auxiliary, with DeMolay for boys and Order of the Rainbow for girls. Their most common symbol is the square and compass, and you will often find Eastern Star carvings or medallions in cemeteries.
Many of the fraternal orders still exist, but numbers have suffered severely as Americans have lost their enthusiasm for “joining,” along with their yen for costumes and secret rituals. In many ways the “service clubs” – Lions, Rotary, Jaycees, Kiwanis, Zonta, Quota, and more – have taken their place.