•
Occidental Mutual Benefit Association – Founded in 1896 in
Salina, Kansas. Had 3,923 members in 1921, at the time it went into receivership. Its assessment system promised that the elderly members would have free insurance and no longer need to pay assessments. However, an investigation by the
Attorney General of Kansas found that monies meant for the retirement fund were misappropriated. After being put in receivership it was ordered to call a special convention so its members could decide which fraternal they merge into. •
Order of Aegis – Established in 1892 in Baltimore. Founders included Oddfellows, Pythians, and members of other fraternal orders. Membership is open to acceptable white men and women ages 16–55. Had 6,500 members in the late 1890s. The organization was governed by a biennial Supreme Lodge. The emblem was a shield bearing the stars and stripes surrounded by a scroll with the organization's motto "Fraternity, Protection, Equality, and Security". Offered sick and death benefits as well as ten-year endowments in which a member could collect on his or her benefits after ten years of membership. It was apparently defunct by the early 1920s. •
Order of Alfredians – Active in Boston, Providence, and other New England areas circa 1870s. It had "beneficiary features" but was founded "for 'the descendants of the wise and good
King Alfred'". It commemorated April 23 because that was the day Alfred ascended the throne in 871. It was also
William Shakespeare's birthday. According to them, Shakespeare was "the poet of all time, the embalmer of the
Anglo-Saxon tongue. It was defunct by the late 1890s. •
Order of the American Fraternal Circle – Founded in Baltimore prior to 1889. It disbanded in 1894. •
Order of Americus – Founded in 1897. Admitted men and women in the Northern States, generally. Had 3,123 members in 66 lodges in 1904. •
Order of Amitie – Philadelphia-based order dissolved in 1894. •
Order of the Benevolent Union – One of several short-term endowment benefit fraternals that were popular in the 1880s and 1890s and then went bankrupt. •
Order of Chosen Friends •
Order of the Continental Fraternal Union – Established in 1890 in
Richmond, Indiana. Among the founders were Freemasons, Oddfellows, members of the Royal Arcanum, Knights of Honor, and the Ancient Order of American Workmen. Open to men and women. Had approximately 3,000 members in the late 1890s. Its emblem was a shield with clasped hands with the letters U.H.F. above and the word "Union" below. It offered sickness and death benefits, attempting to charge as near the actual cost as possible. They were apparently defunct by the early 1920s. •
Order of Equity – Founded in 1889 in
Indianapolis. Founders included Freemasons, Pythians, and Oddfellows. Open to men and women. Had about 4,000 members scattered over 20 states, though concentrated in the Midwest. Ritual based on the Biblical stories of the
Good Samaritan and the
healing of the lepers. The order paid sick, temporary disability, and funeral benefits, as well as operating as a short-term assessment society, i.e., members in the order for a specified amount of time could cash in their certificates. The order went into receivership in March 1897 owing $72,000 to certificate holders while only having $35,000 in assets. •
Order of the Fraternal Circle – One of many short-term endowment benefit fraternals that were popular in the 1880s and 1890s and then went bankrupt. •
Order of the Golden Chain – Founded December 22, 1881, in Baltimore. Founding members included Masons, members of the Knights of Honor, the American Legion of Honor, and the Royal Arcanum. Open to men 21–55 years old. There were 11,000 members in the late 1890s. The ritual was based on the idea of a "golden chain of friendship", as illustrated in the Orders emblem: twelve links of a gold chain surrounding the letters O.G.C. with the motto of the society written in Greek (sources do not identify the motto). Paid life, sick, and total disability benefits. Apparently defunct by the early 1920s. •
Order of Golden Links – Founded in
Wheeling, West Virginia, in 1905. Open to men and women. Merged with the American Insurance Union in 1921. Had a membership of 1,029 in 1921. •
Order of the Golden Rod – Founded in 1894 in Detroit. Founding members included members of the Woodmen of the World, Maccabees, International Fraternal Alliance, National Dotare, Royal Adelphia, Order of Vesta, and Order of the Orient. The order had a unique assessment plan issuing $50 certificates to its members and then assessing them 25 cents per week. Apparently defunct by the early 1920s. •
Order of Heptasophs •
Order of Home Builders – Founded January 25, 1890, and charted by the
Pennsylvania Department of State. Open to men and women 15–65. Paid $500, $250, and $150 death benefits based on age. Sick benefits of $7 a week, as well as short-term endowments. •
Order of Iron Hall – Founded December 1881 in Indianapolis. Originally only open to men, but women were later accepted as social members, and as full members by the time of the Order's demise. The age limits of the order were 18–65. The order had about 125,000 members throughout its existence, with a high of 70,000 to 63,000 when it went into receivership in August 1892. The organization was doomed by its assessment system which required each member to recruit four more and gained money by losing members. By the time of its demise, it had lost $100,000. •
Order of the Iroquois – Founded June 26, 1896, in
Buffalo, New York. One of its charter members was
John E. Pound, Past Supreme Regent of the Royal Arcanum. Open to men 20–55. By 1923 it had 666 benefit members and 20,000 social members distributed across 20 lodges. The order was governed by a supreme lodge, states were organized into Grand Lodges and locals were called Subordinate Lodges. The organization's headquarters was the
Iroquois Building, Buffalo, New York. Officers included a supreme secretary. The ritual of the organization was based on the "name and fame" of the
Iroquois confederacy. The emblem of the order was a portrait of
Red Jacket, an important Iroquois leader of the early 19th century. The first lodge was named Red Jacket #1. In August 1922 it merged with the Fraternal Home Insurance Society of Philadelphia. •
Order of Liberty – Philadelphia-based order. Had 1,100 benefit members were in was re-insured by the Fraternal Home Insurance Society of Philadelphia in early 1922. •
Order Knights of Friendship – Originally conceived by Dr. Mark G. Kerr, MD in 1857, the first local of this order, the Harmony Chamber #1 in Philadelphia was established in January 1859. During the
Civil War, nearly all of the members of the order went off to fight and the order had to be reorganized after the war. The order was open to men who believed in a supreme being. There were 4,000 members in the late 1890s, concentrated in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. In 1920 it was reported to have 20,000 members in 114. At that time the Orders Director-General resided at
Reading, Pennsylvania The order worked three degrees – Knight Junior, Knight Bachelor, and Knight Errant. The order's emblem is a triangle in a circle, a pot, bows, and arrows, and crossed swords. The order's only beneficiary feature was a funeral benefit fund. •
Order of Knights of St. Joseph – Founded in 1896. In 1923 it had 11,729 members in 70 lodges. Its headquarters were at
Society for Savings Building in
Cleveland. It issued certificates of $500 only. •
Order of Mutual Aid – A southern offshoot of the AOUW and the Knights of Honor, the order was established in
Memphis, Tennessee, in the mid-1870s but collapsed in the wake of the
yellow fever outbreak there in 1878. Its remaining members formed the
Knights of the Golden Rule and the
Order of Mutual Protection. •
Order of Mutual Protection – Founded in St. Louis in 1878 by remnants of the
Order of Mutual Aid. Membership was open to men and women 18–55 in good health and not engaged in hazardous professions. Stevens states that they did not accept members in the Southern states except for Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia. However Preuss states that they did no accept members
north of the
31st parallel. There were 5,000 members in the late 1890s. By the early 1920s this had grown to 5,594 benefit members and 73 social members in 51 lodges. Locals were called Subordinate Lodges and the overall organization was the supreme lodge. In the late 1890s, the office of the Supreme Secretary was located in Chicago. In the early 1920s the address of the supreme lodge was at 159 North
State Street, Chicago. The order offered death benefits of $500, $1000, and $2000, but $1000 was open to women and saloon keepers. On total disability, a member was offered one-half the value of his or her certificate, and the full value upon reaching the age of 70. Sick benefits were issued at the discretion of the Subordinate Lodges. The initiation ritual involved the initiate placing his hand on a Bible on an altar in front of the chaplain and swearing never to divulge the secrets of the order. •
Order of the Orient – Name of at least two orders. One was a Michigan-based order that went into
receivership in 1895. However, another Order of the Orient was active in Wisconsin and the
Upper Michigan peninsula. •
Order of Pendo – Stevens reports in the late 1890s that this order was incorporated in the State of California and headquartered in San Francisco. Preuss was unable to get in contact with it in 1923. •
Order of Pente – Founded in 1888 in Philadelphia. Membership was open to men and women between 16 and 65. Had 7,000 members, mostly in Pennsylvania, in the late 1890s. The seal of the order was a five-pointed star inscribed with a pentagon. Founders included Freemasons, Oddfellows, Pythians, and members of the Grand Army of the Republic. The name was related to the insurance scheme of the order which included a five-year maturing certificate. Attempts to contact the order by mail in August 1923 were returned as unclaimed. •
Order of the Red Cross and Knights of the Red Cross – Established in 1879. Founding members were also members of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, among other fraternal beneficiary societies. Had 7,000 members in the late 1890s, concentrated in the Midwest. Ritual based on Biblical incidents. Motto "Omnia pro charitas". The emblem was a crowned red Greek cross with a white five-pointed star in the middle surrounded by a blue band with the order's motto on it. •
Order of the Royal Argosy – Founded in San Francisco in 1888. Stevens was unable to trace it in the late 1890s. •
Order of the Royal Ark – One of many short-term endowment benefit fraternals that were popular in the 1880s and 1890s and then went bankrupt. •
Order of the Sanhedrim – Founded July 26, 1887, in Detroit, Michigan, as a beneficiary society for members of the press. Membership was divided into "Priests, Elders, and Scribes" as well as "'one who sits in
Moses' seat'". Locals were called subordinates or little Sanhedrims. Above them were the State Sanhedrims and the Supreme Sanhedrim. Preuss was unable to trace it in 1923. •
Order of Select Friends – Founded in 1888. Membership was open to men and women ages 18 to fifty except those living in states affected by the
yellow fever epidemic and those in extra-hazardous occupations. It had 5,000 members in the late 1890s, the "relatively larger portion being in Kansas." In 1901 it had 3,600 members left scattered throughout Kansas, Missouri, and Colorado. Locals were called subordinate Lodges while the overall organization was the supreme lodge. Motto "Friendship, Hope and Protection". Paid sick, disability, and old age benefits. Issued death benefit certificates of $1,000, $2,000, and $3,000 paid with graded assessments according to age at the time of joining (for instance, 35 cents of $1,000 for 18, 75 cents for 50) which could not be increased. The order went into receivership by order of the
Kansas Insurance Commissioner in 1901 went it owed $15,000 more than it had in assets. The initial receiver was C.C. Dutton of Erie. It was speculated that the order might be merged with a new group called the American Crusaders. •
Order of Shepherds of Bethlehem – Founded "in America" in
Trenton, New Jersey, on November 19, 1896, by
Ira A. A. Wycoff. Supposedly the group was originally introduced to America by a Sir
Fred Holt who established two lodges in New York in 1875. However, after Holt was recalled to Europe because of his duties as "Grand Scribe" of the "Sovereign Lodge", the order the lodges "quarreled, and under a strange name ran on for a time, then died out, except for a few small Western Lodges that had their start from them and drifted into another small order not connected with this". After this, an unnamed antiquarian was supposed to have gone to the Holy Land and studied with the Shepherds there. "He learned all the old legends and methods of the Order, and on his return presented the Order in the thoroughly original form, translated and put into modern shape." By arrangement with the Sovereign Lodge, the new Supreme Lodge of North America was authorized. Membership was open to men and women 18–55. It had 2,000 members in the late 1890s. By the early 1920s this had grown to 27,950 members in 265 lodges. Headquarters were at 927 N. 5th Street,
Camden, New Jersey. The order worked three degrees – Light, Shepherds, and Disciples. Members called each other Sir and Lady. The order offered sick and death benefits. By the early 1920s it operated a home for aged members and orphans of members. •
Order of the Solid Rock – Founded in 1889. One of many short-term endowment fraternities that tried to pay back certificates of $100 to $1000 but soon became insolvent after the first set of certificate holders attempted to collect. Many people lost money on these schemes which became popular for a short time and then folded after a few years. •
Order of Solon – Organized in Pittsburgh in 1879. One of many short-term endowments that became popular for a while in the 1880s and 1890s then went bankrupt. •
Order of the Sons of Progress – Organized in Philadelphia in 1879. One of many short-term endowments that became popular for a while in the 1880s and 1890s then went bankrupt. •
Order of Sparta – Founded in
Philadelphia in 1879 by members of the
Ancient Order of United Workmen. Membership is open to Christian men between 21 and 50 in good physical health. It was restricted to the areas within 100 miles of Philadelphia. Had 7,000 members in the late 1890s. On January 1, 1915, the order had 2,104 benefit members in good standing. Locals were called Senates and the central organization was called the "Great Senate". There were 21 subordinate Senates on January 1, 1914. Rituals were based on the history of ancient Sparta. Had a permanent fund to pay the assessments of those who were members for 25 years and a relief fund for those who could not pay their assessments through sickness or financial disability. In 1916 the order was declared insolvent and placed in receivership after members who had been in the order for over 25 years, demanded their assessments be paid out of the general fund and objected to a new assessment being levied on them. The order, however, was reversed by the
Superior Court of Pennsylvania. Nevertheless, the order filed for bankruptcy in December of that year, leading to a federal case that decided unincorporated entities were liable for bankruptcy. •
Order of the Totine – A Pennsylvania-based fraternal benefit that was "assigned" in 1895 and its assets divided among its 15,000 members. •
Order of the Triangle – Mentioned in the 1890 census as a mutual assessment fraternity operating out of Brooklyn. They could not be traced by the late 1890s. •
Order of True Friends – Founded in 1886 in New York. It paid death benefits of $200 and weekly sick benefits of $2.50 to $5 using mutual assessments. Could not be contacted by mail in the late 1890s. •
Order of United Artisans – Founded in 1894. Had 17,242 members in 263 lodges in 1923. Headquartered in the six-story United Artisans Building at the corner of
Broadway and Oak Street in
Portland, Oregon. Had a Juvenile Department for children of members under 18. They were eligible for $200 for the first four years after turning 18 to attend a state college. Another establishment was an Artisan Home for aged and dependent members, that was also open to returning veterans of the
First World War. •
Order of United Friends •
Order of United Commercial Travelers of America •
Order of Unity – Founded in Philadelphia in 1889. Open to men and women. There were 2,500 members in the late 1890s. The order claimed to be non-sectarian and its ritual "teaches strength in union, justice to all, and protection through fraternity." Paid death benefits from $500 to $1,000 and weekly sick benefits from $2.50 to $20. It had probably disbanded by 1923. •
Order of Vesta – One of many short-term mutual assessment fraternals that became popular in the late 1880s and early 1890s that were popular for a short time, then went under. This order's membership was concentrated in Pennsylvania where the order made an "assignment" in 1895 and then wound up. •
Order of the World – Founded in
Wheeling, West Virginia March 7, 1893. There were 16,000 members in the late 1890s. Its goals included advancing the social and moral condition of its members, assisting them in obtaining employment, caring for the sick and disabled, burying the dead, and providing for the widows and orphans of members. Despite this, it was not considered a mutual benefit order. Fraternal benefits were available to its members though, through the World Mutual Benefit Association. •
Order of the World (Boston) – One of many short-term endowment benefit fraternals that were popular in the 1880s and 1890s and then went bankrupt. == P ==