Alabama :(compare to in
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Alaska Arizona :(compare to in
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Arkansas :(compare to in
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California Masons in California grew from 258 members in 1850 to over 63,000 in 1918, declining to 46,000 in 2019. :(compare to in
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Colorado :(compare to in
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Connecticut :(compare to in
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Delaware Florida :(compare to in
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Georgia :(compare to in
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Hawaii Idaho :(compare to in
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Illinois :(compare to in
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Indiana :(compare to in
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Iowa :(compare to in
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Kansas :(compare to in
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Kentucky :(compare to in
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Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Boston has been the site of several significant Masonic buildings. In 1830, the
Grand Lodge of Massachusetts bought land on the corner of
Tremont Street and Turnagain Alley. A Temple was constructed on the site and dedicated in 1832, but initially could not be owned by the Grand Lodge because of legal limitations on the value of
real estate that the Grand Lodge could hold. Turnagain Alley became Temple Place and the
Temple School, established by
Bronson Alcott, was housed there during the 1830s. The Temple also held a concert hall Masons used the Masonic Temple for meetings until 1858, when the building was sold to the
U.S. government for use as a
courthouse. The government sold the building in 1885 and it was remodeled into commercial space for the
R. H. Stearns department store. Beginning in 1859, Boston's Masons occupied a building at the corner of Tremont and
Boylston Streets that was known as Winthrop House, and that was rededicated as "Freemason's Hall" in December 1859. That building was destroyed by fire in April 1864. A grand new Masonic Temple building, designed by
Merrill G. Wheelock, was built in its place on the same site and dedicated in 1867. The second temple was also destroyed by fire in 1895 and replaced at the same location with a building designed by
George F. Loring and Sanford Phipps, dedicated on December 27, 1899. Also in Massachusetts: :(compare to in
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Michigan :(compare to in
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Minnesota :(compare to in
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Mississippi :(compare to in
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Missouri :(compare to in
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Montana :(compare to in
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Nebraska :(compare to in
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Nevada :(compare to in
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New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York :(compare to in
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North Carolina :(compare to in
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North Dakota :(compare to in
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Ohio :(compare to in
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Oklahoma :(compare to in
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Oregon :(compare to in
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Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas :(compare to in
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Utah Vermont Virginia Washington :(compare to in
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West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming ==Federal district==