The first Lodge in Indiana was created by residents of
Vincennes, Indiana. They sought a dispensation to create the Lodge from
Louisville, Kentucky's Abraham Lodge #8 in 1806. One was granted in 1807, but due to the distance, they were not able to constitute the lodge. After a second dispensation was sought in 1808, a lodge was formed on March 13, 1809, and the officers were initiated. Other lodges in the Indiana Territory founded by the
Grand Lodge of Kentucky were
Madison (1815),
Charlestown (1816), Melchizedek in
Salem (1817), Pisgah in
Corydon,
Lawrenceburg,
Rising Sun, and
Vevay (1817). On May 9, 1817, the
Grand Lodge of Ohio granted a dispensation for Brookville Harmony Lodge in
Brookville, Indiana; this lodge would remain under the Grand Lodge of Ohio for two years following the founding of Indiana's Grand Lodge. After
Indiana attained statehood, it qualified for its own
Grand Lodge. While attending the annual meeting of the
Grand Lodge of Kentucky in September 1817, members of several lodges within the new state agreed to meet in Corydon with representative from all lodges and discuss the viability of forming a Grand Lodge with the State of Indiana. On December 3, 1817, discussion began as to whether a Grand Lodge for Indiana should be formed, 354 days after Indiana gained statehood. Eleven Freemasons from the various lodges in Indiana met in Corydon, and decided to initiate the new Grand Lodge. Amongst these was the first
Lieutenant-governor of
Indiana,
Christopher Harrison. Thus, the Grand Lodge of Indiana was chartered on January 13, 1818, at the presently-named
Schofield House, owned by Alexander Lanier, father of
James Lanier and a Freemason as well, in Madison, Indiana. Only three Freemasons attended both meetings. The first Grand Master of Indiana was
Alexander Buckner of Charlestown, who would later become a
United States senator from
Missouri. The Grand Lodge would have its first annual meeting in Charlestown, and would alternate between several southern Indiana towns until its 1828 meeting at Indianapolis, where it has remained ever since. Indiana would not escape the
anti-Masonry hysteria of the 1820s-1840 that was touched off by the unexplained disappearance of
William Morgan in upstate New York in 1826. In 1828 there were 33 lodges in Indiana; twenty of them had closed by 1835. In 1834 there was talk of dissolving the Grand Lodge, and by 1837 there were only twelve lodges left in Indiana. In many of the years between 1828 and 1842, the Grand Master did not even attend the Grand Lodge meetings. But by 1842 the anti-Masonic panic had waned, and American grand lodges slowly began to grow again. Following the
American Civil War, Freemasonry in the U.S. dramatically increased in popularity, along with the establishment of hundreds of new, similarly modeled fraternal organizations. The period from the late 1860s until the Great Depression of 1929 became known as the '
Golden Age of Fraternalism'. Between 1860 and 1870, Indiana's Masonic membership more than doubled, from 9,727 to 23,308. ==Post-1900==