Ashland Masonic Lodge Building

United States historic place
Ashland Masonic Lodge Building
U.S. Historic district
Contributing property
The Ashland Masonic Lodge in 2011.
42°11′49″N 122°42′57″W / 42.197063°N 122.715800°W / 42.197063; -122.715800
Area0.1 acres (0.040 ha)
Built1880, 1909, 1928
ArchitectL. S. P. Marsh, Frank Chamberlain Clark
Architectural styleGeorgian Revival
Part ofAshland Downtown Historic District (ID00000446)
NRHP reference No.92000663[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPJune 4, 1992
Designated CPMay 5, 2000

The Ashland Masonic Lodge Building is a historic building located in Ashland, Oregon. Constructed in 1909 as a meeting hall for a local Masonic lodge, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.[1]

It was built in 1880 as a two-story brick building in Italianate to a design by local contractor L.S.P. Marsh. It was expanded in its second floor in 1909 with design by local architect Frank C. Clark, and Clark also designed a third floor added in 1928 along with a remodeling of the building facade into Georgian style. The remodelling added a "a pilaster strip colonnade with stylized Corinthian capitals and full entablature framing the central five bays".[2]

With a 50 feet (15 m) frontage, and its superior height of three stories, the building came to "dominate" the block of buildings defining the west side of Ashland's town square.[2]

Renovations on the first floor followed a fire in 1959.[2]

It was deemed significant for National Register listing in part as its main assembly hall, an upstairs "clear span space 45 feet wide and 55 feet long" with detailed ceiling beams, cornice moldings, pilasters and an encircling entablature, "is one of the few intact lodge rooms of pre-World War I vintage remaining in southern Oregon, and it is replete with historic furniture and equippage."[2]

It was included again on the National Register in 2000 as a contributing building in the Ashland Downtown Historic District.

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d Katherine C. Atwood; Vincent Claflin (November 1991). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Ashland Masonic Lodge Building / Masonic Hall #23 A.F. and A.M." National Park Service. Retrieved December 22, 2022. With accompanying six photos
  • v
  • t
  • e
List
Historic
districts
Properties
  • Nils Ahlstrom House
  • Thomas N. Anderson House
  • Antelope Creek Bridge
  • Ashland Cemetery
  • Ashland Depot Hotel, South Wing
  • Ashland Downtown Historic District
  • Ashland Masonic Lodge Building
  • Ashland Municipal Powerhouse
  • Ashland Oregon National Guard Armory
  • Ashland Railroad Addition Historic District
  • W. H. Atkinson House
  • Sophenia Ish Baker House
  • Barclay–Klum House
  • Barnum Hotel
  • Baldwin Beach House
  • Robert Vinton Beall House
  • Beeson–Foss Ranch
  • Big Elk Guard Station
  • Boslough–Claycomb House
  • Walter Bowne House
  • BPOE Lodge No. 1168
  • Buckhorn Mineral Springs Resort
  • Victor and Bertha Bursell House
  • Butte Falls Ranger Station
  • Frank E. Bybee House
  • William Bybee House
  • Richard Posey Campbell House
  • A. S. V. Carpenter and Helen Bundy House
  • E. V. Carter House
  • H. B. Carter House
  • Carter–Fortmiller House
  • Central Point Public School
  • Chappell–Swedenburg House
  • Chavner Family House
  • Citizen's Banking & Trust Co. Building
  • Frank Chamberlain Clark House
  • Cooley–Neff Warehouse
  • Orlando Coolidge House
  • Corning Court Ensemble
  • Dead Indian Soda Springs Shelter
  • E. Raymond Driver House
  • Patrick Dunn Ranch
  • Dutchman Peak Lookout
  • Eddings–Provost House
  • Eden Valley Orchard
  • H. Chandler and Alice B. Egan House
  • Enders Building
  • Edward Charles Faber House
  • First Baptist Church
  • First National Bank, Vaupel Store and Oregon Hotel Buildings
  • Fish Lake Shelter
  • Fluhrer Bakery Building
  • Fort Lane Military Post Site
  • Andrew J. Fredenburg House
  • C. E. "Pop" Gates House
  • Glenview Orchard Ensemble
  • Gold Hill High School
  • G. M. and Kate Grainger House
  • Edgar F. Hafer House
  • Michael Hanley Farmstead
  • Hanscom Hall
  • Hargadine Cemetery
  • Holly Theatre
  • Charles and Elizabeth Hatch House
  • Hillcrest Orchard Historic District
  • George A. Hover House
  • Imnaha Guard Station
  • IOOF Building
  • Jackson County Courthouse
  • Jacksonville Historic District
  • Jacksonville-to-Fort Klamath Military Wagon Road
  • E. C. Kane House
  • Liberty Building
  • Lithia Park
  • Lithia Springs Hotel
  • Lodgepole Guard Station
  • Lost Creek Bridge
  • Robert and Ruth Lucas House and Mary E. Rose House
  • Madden–McCaskey House
  • John McCall House
  • William McCredie House
  • McKee Bridge
  • McKee Bridge Campground
  • Patrick F. McManus House
  • Medford Carnegie Library
  • Medford Central Firehall
  • Medford Downtown Historic District
  • Medford Geneva–Minnesota Historic District
  • Medford Grocery Company Warehouse
  • Medford IOOF Cemetery
  • Medford Plaza Apartments
  • Medford Southern Pacific Railroad Passenger Depot
  • John W. Merritt House and Store
  • Mountain House (Ashland, Oregon)
  • Mountain View Cemetery
  • Mt. Stella Lookout
  • Amos and Vera Nininger House
  • John Orth House
  • Parker Meadows Shelter
  • Reginald Parsons Dead Indian Lodge
  • Hamilton and Edith Patton House
  • S. and Sarah J. Pedigrift House
  • Peerless Rooms Building
  • Emil and Alice Applegate Peil House
  • John and Charlotte Pelton House
  • Domingo Perozzi House
  • Dr. E.B. Pickel Rental House
  • Humboldt Pracht House
  • Prospect Hotel
  • Putnam–Neff House
  • Alfred Evan Reames House
  • Dr. John F. and Mary Reddy House
  • Rich Gulch Diggings
  • Rock Point Hotel
  • Rogue Elk Hotel
  • Root–Banks House
  • Fordyce Roper House – Southern Oregon Hospital
  • Schuler Apartment Building
  • Shone–Charley House
  • Col. William H. Silsby House
  • Siskiyou–Hargadine Historic District
  • Skidmore Academy Historic District
  • Snowy Butte Flour Mill
  • South Oakdale Historic District
  • Sparta Building
  • Squaw Peak Lookout
  • Star Ranger Station
  • Star Ranger Station Building, Old
  • Dr. Charles T. and Mary Sweeney House
  • Talent Elementary School
  • George Taverner House
  • Tayler–Phipps Building
  • Trinity Episcopal Church
  • U.S. Post Office and Courthouse
  • Union Creek Historic District
  • Henry Van Hoevenberg Jr. House
  • Wagner Creek School
  • John P. Walker House
  • Washington Elementary School
  • Mathias Welch House
  • West Side Feed and Sale Stable
  • Whaleback Snow-Survey Cabin
  • John B. White House
  • Harry L. Whited House
  • Whittle Garage Building
  • Wilkinson–Swem Building
  • Willow Prairie Cabin
  • Women's Civic Improvement Clubhouse
  • Isaac Woolen House
  • Wrangle Gap Shelter
Formerly
listed


Stub icon

This article about a property in Oregon on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e