
History Of Freemasonry
In Ohio
From 1791 to 1912
by W. M. Cunningham and John
G. Reeves
THE HISTORY OF THE MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
OF FREE AND ACCEPTED MASONS OF THE STATE
OF OHIO
From 1892 To 1912
INCLUSIVE
By W. M. CUNNINGHAM, M. A.,
Past Grand Master F.& A M., P. G. H. P. of Royal Arch
Masons, P. G. M. of R. and S. Masters, and
S. G. I. G. 33° Grand Historian.

VOLUME 3
Part IV
Copyright, 1914 By J. H. Bromwell Grand Secretary
Cincinnati, Ohio
1912
M.·. W.·. THOMAS B. GUITTEAU,
GRAND MASTER, IN THE CHAIR
The Grand Lodge of the Most Ancient and
Honorable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons of the state of Ohio
convened in the Valentine Theater, Toledo, Ohio, at ten o'clock, A.
M., Wednesday, October 23, 1912, there being in attendance all the Grand
Officers, the following.
PAST GRAND OFFICERS
M. .W. Past Grand Masters Leander Burdick,
Levi C. Goodale, Allen Andrews, Wm. B. Melish, Barton Smith, Nelson
Williams, F. C. Gulliford, F. L. Lybarger, Frank S. Harmon, Ike M. Robinson,
W. A. Belt, O. P. Sperra, C. G. Ballou, Lewis P. Schaus, Horace A. Irvin,
Geo. D. Copeland, C. S. Hoskinsen, B. F. Perry and H. S. Kissell.
R.·. W.·. Past Deputy Grand
Master, Wm. J. Akers, and 23 District Lecturers.
OPENING
M.·. W.·. Bro. F. C. Gulliford
submitted the following:
REPORT ON CREDENTIALS
Number of chartered Lodges, 524; number
of Lodges represented, 518; number of Lodges not represented, 6; proxies
on file of Worshipful Master, 32; proxies on file of Senior Warden,
226; proxies on file of Junior Warden, 225.
The committee further reported all of the
Grand Officers, all of the Past Grand Masters except M.·. W.·.
Bro. Carroll F. Clapp, the Past Deputy Grand Master, all of the District
Lecturers except Bros. F. G. Chamberlin and Fred F. Harmon, and a constitutional
number of Lodges, duly represented by their officers and proxies, present
and registered.
Whereupon the Grand Master declared the
M.·. W.·. Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the
state of Ohio opened in Ample Form.
This was followed by an invocation by the
R.·. W.·. Grand Chaplain, Clement G. Martin. The Masonic
Glee Club, made up entirely of Masons, and under the direction of Bro.
V. O. Moore, rendered a musical selection.
The M.·. W.·. Grand Master
submitted his annual address in which among other things were the following:
IN MEMORIAM
Past Deputy Grand Master M.·. W.·.
Bro. Jacob L'Hommedieu Long died at Mansfield, Ohio, on May 31, 1912.
His remains were conveyed to Ottawa, Ohio, his former residence, under
an escort of Brethren from Mansfield, where, on Sunday afternoon, June
2, the beautiful funeral service of the Order was performed at the Presbyterian
Church of that city, under the auspices of Ottawa Lodge No.325.
Upon receipt of the notice of the death
of M.·. W.·. Bro. Long, a memorial was issued and sent
to each Lodge in this Grand Jurisdiction.
FRATERNAL DEAD IN OTHER JURISDICTIONS
During the year I have received notice
of the death of twenty-six distinguished Brethren of other Grand Jurisdictions.
DISTRICT LECTURERS
I issued a call to the District Lecturers
to meet at the Masonic Temple, Columbus, on January 19, 1912, for the
purpose of perfecting plans for the inspection of Lodges, the discussion
of ritualistic work, inspection blanks, etc. Twenty of the twenty-five
Lecturers were present, and a profitable day was spent discussing these
matters.
We were honored upon this occasion by the
presence of M.·. W.·. Bro. Lewis P. Schaus, P. G. M.,
and R.·. W.·. Bro. George L. Marshall, Junior Grand Warden
All Lodges in the Jurisdiction have been inspected. Each Lodge has received
a letter from the Grand Master upon receipt of the District Lecturer's
report. I am pleased to say that with few exceptions the Lodges arc
shown to be proficient in the Ritual, and in an excellent financial
and physical condition.
The District Lecturers are deserving of
much praise for the zeal and efficiency displayed. They have served
the Craft with the utmost fidelity, and have kindly and cheerfully responded
to every personal request.
TRUSTEES OF THE OHIO MASONIC HOME
In accordance with the provisions of Resolution
XXII of this Grand Lodge, on December 28, 1911, I reappointed Bros.
Edward Harford and R. Arthur Worthington, both of Springfield, Ohio,
as Trustees of the Ohio Masonic Home.
DISPENSATIONS FOR NEW LODGES
I have granted six dispensations to establish
new Lodges, the petitioners having in each case complied with all the
requirements of the Code, viz.:
October 21, 1911, to 145 applicants to
open a Lodge in Toledo, Ohio, to be known as "Barton Smith Lodge,"
so named in honor of M.·. W.·. Bro. Barton Smith, a Past
Grand Master of this Grand Lodge, a beloved member of the Fraternity
of Toledo, and well known to Masonry throughout the world.
Since granting dispensation, this Lodge
has attained a membership of approximately 225, with a large amount
of work in sight. Barton Smith Lodge is in a most flourishing condition.
December 28, 1911, to petitioners of Cincinnati,
Ohio, to open a Lodge to be known as "Winton Lodge."
May 23, 1912, to 80 applicants of Youngstown, Ohio, to open a Lodge
to be known as "Youngstown Lodge."
May 29, 1912, to petitioners of Dayton, Ohio, to open a Lodge to be
known as "Stillwater Lodge."
July 30, 1912, to petitioners of Sherwood, Ohio, to open a Lodge to
be known as "Sherwood Lodge."
August 20, 1912, to petitioners of Columbus, Ohio, to open a Lodge to
be known as "David N. Kinsman Lodge."
This Lodge was named in honor of that great and good man, our late Bro.
David N. Kinsman, of Columbus, Ohio. May the naming of this Lodge in
his memory be a monument to '~iis untiring efforts in behalf of Masonry!
DISPENSATIONS GRANTED
During my term of office I have granted
ninety dispensations, as follows:
To elect and install various officers of
Lodges 30
To attend Divine Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
To occupy temporary quarters . . . . . . . . . . . .12
To remove into new Lodge rooms . . . . . . . . . 12
To participate in laying corner stones . . . . . . 11
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .90
SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS
During my term of office the Most Worshipful
Grand Lodge of Ohio has been convened in Special Communication for the
following purposes:
DEDICATIONS
November 25, 1911, Lodge rooms of Dover
Lodge No.489, Dover, Ohio, R.·. W.·. Bro. Edwin S. Griffiths
Deputy Grand Master, presiding.
December 11, 1911, Lodge rooms of Covington
Lodge No.168, Covington, Ohio, M.·. W.·. Bro. Thomas B.
Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
December 27, 1914, Lodge rooms of Roseville
Lodge No.566, Roseville, Ohio, M.·. W.·. Bro. Ike M. Robinson,
Past Grand Master, presiding.
February 22, 1912, Lodge rooms of Spartan Lodge No.126, Millersburg,
Ohio, W. Bro. Clinton B. Wilcox, Junior Grand Deacon, presiding.
June 14, 1912, Lodge rooms of Bryan Lodge No.215, Bryan, Ohio, M.·.
W.·. Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
September 7, 1912, Lodge rooms of Olive Lodge No.210, Mt. Ephraim, Ohio,
Bro. E. G. Chamberlin, District Lecturer, presiding.
September 16, 1912, New Masonic Temple at Chicago, Ohio, M.·.
W.·. Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
Detailed reports of the above communications
are printed in the proceedings.
SPECIAL EMERGENT COMMUNICATIONS
At the last session of the Grand Lodge,
charters were issued to the following Lodges, all of which have been
constituted and consecrated by myself or by Brethren acting under authority
of my proxy:
LODGES CONSTITUTED
October 24, 1911, I regularly constituted
and consecrated Meridian Lodge, No.610, and installed its officers at
Cleveland, Ohio.
October 30, 1911, I regularly constituted and consecrated Calumet Lodge
No.612, and installed its officers at Toledo, Ohio.
October 31, 1911, acting under authority of my proxy, M.·. W.·.
Bro. Frank S. Harmon, Past Grand Master, regularly constituted and consecrated
Henry Perkins Lodge No.611, and installed its officers at Akron, Ohio.
November 4, 1911, acting under authority of my proxy, Bro. Joseph C.
Brenan regularly constituted and consecrated Belpre Lodge No.609, and
installed its officers at Belpre, Ohio.
Detailed reports of the above communications
will be found in the proceedings.
CORNER STONES LAID
October 22, 1911, Marvin Memorial Parish
House of the Church of Our Savior (Episcopal), Akron, Ohio, M.·.
W.·. Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
November 17, 1911, Public School Building, Mason, Ohio, R.·.
W.·. Bro. George L. Marshall, Junior Grand Warden, presiding.
November 24, 1911, Federal Building at Ironton, Ohio, R.·. W.·.
Bro. Charles J. Pretzman, Senior Grand Warden, presiding.
April 19, 1912, Carnegie Library Building, Mt. Sterling, Ohio, R.·.
W.·. Bro. Charles J. Pretzman, Senior Grand Warden, presiding.
June 8, 1912, New Masonic Temple, West Toledo, Ohio, M.·. W.·.
Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
June 30, 1912, All Souls' Universalist Church, Cleveland, Ohio, M. .W.
Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
August 10, 1912, New Postoffice at Massillon, Ohio, M.·. W.·.
Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
August 18, 1912, New Masonic Temple, Defiance, Ohio, M.·. W.·.
Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
August 25, 1912, New Masonic Temple, Montpelier, Ohio, M.·. W.·.
Bro. Thomas B. Gnitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
September 1, 1912, Episcopal Church at Nelsonville, Ohio, M.·.
W.·. Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master, presiding.
Detailed reports of the above are printed
in the proceedings.
FIRES
During the past year the following Masonic
Temples or Halls were damaged or destroyed by fire, and in one ease
the charter was lost:
The Masonic Temple at Washington C. H.
was entirely destroyed by fire on the night of December 30, 1911. I
am pleased to state, however, that Fayette Lodge No.107, saved its charter,
as well as part of the records. Thereupon, at the request of said Lodge,
I issued a dispensation authorizing it to temporarily hold its meetings
in the I. O. O. F. Building in that city.
On January 23, 1912, the Masonic Temple
at Portsmouth was badly damaged by fire, sustaining a loss of approximately
$25,000.00, which fortunately was fully covered by insurance. The Lodge
rooms of Aurora Lodge suffered no damage other than that occasioned
by smoke.
On April 8, 1912, the Hall of Bloomingburg
Lodge No.449, F. & A. M., Bloomingburg, Ohio, together with its
charter, part of the records and all the furniture, was totally consumed
by fire. Other quarters having been secured and inspected, on April
9th I issued a dispensation authorizing Bloomingburg Lodge to temporarily
occupy the same.
The Hall of Chester Lodge No.238, F. &
A. M., at Chesterville, was entirely consumed by fire in the afternoon
of June 3, 1912. While said Lodge lost all its furniture, the records
and charter were saved. I therefore issued a dispensation authorizing
Chester Lodge to temporarily hold its meetings in the Hall of the I.
O. O. F., in said village.
VISITATIONS
During my term of office I visited thirty-one
Lodges, and personally conducted the services at the laying of seven
corner stones, the dedication of three Masonic Halls, and the consecration
of two Lodges.
The Grand Treasurer submitted his report
showing the balance in the General Fund, October 12, 1912, $67,792.71.
The Grand Secretary presented his twenty-fourth
annual report stating this has been, so far as increase of membership
is concerned, one of the most prosperous years in this Grand Body. The
number of members August 31, 1912, was 86,493, a net gain for the year
of 3,660. The total income for the year was $64,790.50 of which $63,644.65
was Grand dues. The per capita tax due the Masonic Homo is $25,947.90,
and he recommends the additional donation of the sum of $20,000.00,
which recommendation was concurred in by the Committee on Accounts and
adopted by the Grand Lodge, which appropriated to the Building or Dormitory
Fund, $15,000.00, and to the General Expense Fund, $5,000.00.
He further reports as follows:
EXAMINATION AND CORRECTIONS OF BY-LAWS
"I take pleasure in informing you
that the work of examining and causing corrections to be made in the
various By-Laws is practically completed, the only two which are still
unfinished being those of Nos.151 and 464."
CUTS OF TEMPLES
He has procured a large number of photographs
of Masonic Temples throughout the state and, with your permission, will
make a selection for insertion in the annual proceedings for this year.
They can not all be included at one time, but the others can follow
in the succeeding proceedings until all have been printed.
He has also obtained from the living Past
Grand Masters biographical sketches giving their Masonic records, to
be filed for future reference.
DISTINGUISHED VISITOR
M.·. W.·. Bro. Frank T. Lodge,
Past Grand Master of the Grand Lodge F. & A. M. of Michigan, and
representative of that Grand Lodge near the Grand Lodge of Ohio, was
introduced to the Grand Lodge and made a most interesting and eloquent
response to the greetings extended to him by the Most Worshipful Grand
Master.
TESTIMONIAL TO THE GRAND SECRETARY
M.·. W.·. Bro. Levi C. Goodale,
on behalf of the Special Committee appointed at the last session of
the Grand Lodge to procure and present to the Grand Secretary a testimonial
of the appreciation of the Grand Lodge for the services rendered by
him in the examination and correction of the Lodge By-Laws, submitted
a report of that committee and presented to the Grand Secretary, in
the name of the Grand Lodge, a beautiful office desk and revolving chair.
M.·. W.·. Bro. Horace A.
Irvin, chairman of the committee appointed at the last communication
to procure and present to the retiring Grand Master, M.·. W.·.
Harry S. Kissell, a Past Grand Master's Jewel, reported that the committee
had duly performed the pleasant duty assigned to them at a special meeting
of Anthony Lodge No.455, (of which Brother Kissell is a member), called
for that purpose, at which over five hundred Masons were present and
which was followed with an elaborate banquet.
On recommendation of the Committee on Charters
and Dispensations a duplicate charter was granted to Bloomingburg Lodge
No.449, in lieu of the original destroyed by fire.
The Committee on Necrology submitted their
report and testimonials as to the loss by death of Past Deputy Grand
Master R.·. W.·. Jacob L'H. Long; Past Master J. Russell
Johnson of Mystic Lodge No.405, Dayton, Ohio, who was also a Past Grand
Commander of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templars of Ohio, and a
Thirty-third Degree member of the Supreme Council of the A. A. S. R.
for the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States of America,
and the 1137 members of the Subordinate lodges in this Grand Jurisdiction;
and the distinguished dead of twenty of our sister Grand Jurisdictions,
among which were R.·. W.·. Bro. Wm. H. Dingley, 86 years,
for 42 years Grand Treasurer of the Grand Lodge of Alabama, and had
served as Grand Treasurer of all the Grand Masonic Bodies in that state;
R.·. W.·. Henry B. Grant, 75 years, served 25 years as
Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Kentucky. At Painesville, Ohio,
Joseph Chapmen, Past Grand Master of Iowa, 81 years; R.·. W.·.
Christopher Diehl, 82 years, for 40 years Grand Secretary of the Grand
Lodge of Utah, and a number of others whose ages range from 73 to 88
years. Verily the grim reaper has been busy garnering in the ranks of
the Patriarchs of the Order.
PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO SECTION 28 OF THE
CODE
R.·. W.·. Bro. Chas. J. Pretzman
submitted the following proposed amendment to Section 28 of the Code,
properly seconded:
"No Lodge shall receive the petition
of any applicant for the degrees unless such applicant shall have resided
one year in the jurisdiction of such Lodge; provided, however, that
any commissioned, non-commissioned, or warrant officer, or enlisted
soldier of the regular army of the United States, who has been in the
service for a period of not less than one year, and who is stationed
at a regular United States barracks or post within the Grand Jurisdiction
of Ohio, may petition any Lodge within whose jurisdiction said barracks
or post is located, without reference to his actual residence for one
year within said jurisdiction," which was referred to the Committee
on Masonic Jurisprudence which reported thereon and the same was laid
over to the next Annual Grand Communication.
DISTINGUISHED GUESTS
The following distinguished Masons being
present were severally introduced to the Grand Lodge and welcomed to
seats in the Grand East:
M.·. E.·. Companion Thomas
H. Isitt, Grand High Priest of the Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons;
M.·. Ill.·. Lewis P. Schaus, Grand Master of the Grand
Council of Royal and Select Masons; M.·. W.·. Bro. Frank
S. Harmon, Thirty-third Degree, Deputy of the A. A. S. R.; M.·.
W.·. Bro. Horace A. Irvin, Venerable President of the Masonic
Veterans Association of Ohio, and M. Em. Sir Wm. B. Melish, Grand Master
of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templars, U. S. A.
Each of these distinguished Brethren made
suitable responses as introduced.
On motion of M.·. W.·. Bro.
Frank S. Harmon, (R.·. W.·. Bro. E. S. Griffiths being
in the Chair), the following committee was appointed to procure and
present to M.·. W.·. Bro. Thomas B. Guitteau, Grand Master,
the usual Past Grand Master's Jewel, viz.: M.·. W.·. Bros.
Barton Smith, Frank S. Harmon and Leander Burdick.
Brother Edwin S. Griffiths of Cleveland,
was elected M.·. W.·. Grand Master; Bro. Charles J. Pretzman
of Columbus, R.·. W.·. Deputy Grand Master; Brother George
L. Marshall of Dayton, R.·. W.·. Senior Grand Warden;
Bro. Frank H. Marquis of Mansfield, R.·. W.·. Junior Grand
Warden; Bro. Ralph R. Rickly of Columbus, R.·. W.·. Grand
Treasurer, for the eighteenth consecutive time, and Bro. J. H. Bromwell
of Cincinnati, R.·. W.·. Grand Secretary, for the twenty-fifth
consecutive time.
Columbus, Ohio, was selected as the place,
and Wednesday, October 22, A. D. 1913, as the time for holding the next
Annual Grand Communication.
On recommendation of the Committee on Charters
and Dispensations, charters were issued to the following Lodges, viz.:
Barton Smith Lodge at Toledo; Winton Lodge at Cincinnati; Youngstown
Lodge at Youngstown; Stillwater Lodge at Dayton, and Kinsman Lodge at
Columbus; and Sherwood Lodge was continued under dispensation.
The Committee on S. Stacker Williams Library
reported that they have received from the Masonic Library Association
of Cincinnati, (Custodian of the Williams Library), through its President,
a tabulated statement showing the additions made to the Library since
it came into their possession, in 1907, of which the following is a
condensed report:
Proceedings needed July, 1909 . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,087
Proceedings needed later to cover the years of 1910, 1911 and 1912 .
. . 719
Total Proceedings needed to Oct.15, 1912 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 2,806
Proceedings secured to Oct., 1911 . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,466
Proceedings secured from Oct., 1911, to Oct., 1912 . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 591
Total Proceedings procured to date. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . 2,057
Leaving Proceedings yet needed to complete all sets up to 1912 . . .
. . .749
On recommendation of the Committee the
sum of $100.00 was donated to the Cincinnati Masonic Library Association
for the purpose of defraying the expense of postage, expressage, etc.,
incidental to the procuring of the volumes needed to keep the sets of
proceedings up to date.
The Committee on Foreign Correspondence
presented its report covering 195 pages, reviewing the proceedings of
seventy Grand Lodges and giving a condensed and masterly epitome of
the important transactions of every Grand Jurisdiction in the world
for the year past, and containing more useful information in relation
to Masonic law, jurisprudence, usage and procedure than can be found
in any monitor of history extant.
A slight idea of the scope of these reports
can be had by examining the index of that report covering five pages,
treating 145 subjects.
In referring to these reports at various
times during the second and third volumes we have called the attention
of our readers to many of the important subjects contained in them,
urged the Craft and specially the Masonic student and the officers of
the Subordinate Lodges to carefully read and study them thereby better
fitting themselves to perform their duties as officers and Masons.
For over half a century M.·. W.·.
Bro. William M. Cunningham, regularly attended every communication of
this Grand Lodge, and for a quarter of a century he served it continuously
as Chairman of the Foreign Correspondence Committee and gave to that
service and to its reports his long experience, his unexcelled literary
ability, and his ripe scholarship in Masonic history, jurisprudence
'and procedure, dispensing light on many important subjects Dot treated
in the monitors or histories, such as Clandestine Masonry, Negro Masonry,
the so called Prince Hall Grand Lodge, manner of wearing the Masonic
Apron, and hundreds of others as can be seen by consulting the index
to each yearly report, and we again urge on all Masonic students and
officers to read them carefully, including those since his death, which
are kept up to the same high standard.
M.·. W.·. Bro. Nelson Williams,
chairman of the committee, concludes his 1912 report as follows:
And now having done the best we could,
we leave the labors of the committee for a season of rest and refreshment:
FROM LABOR TO REFRESHMENT
From Labor to Refreshment-what a happy
thought it is,
As we journey down the avenues of Time,
To feel that sweet refreshment will reward our labors here,
In that Lodge where every precept is sublime.
To fell that all the burdens, all the sorrows,
all the woes,
All the trials, all the aches, and all the pains,
Will be buried as poor Hiram, when the Soul in freedom goes
To that Lodge where our Grand Master ever reigns.
From Labor to Refreshment - 'tis the Junior
Warden's call
In the Lodge Known as Symbolic here below,
And every Brother pauses when he hears the gavel fall,
For its potent power all the Masons know.
Our Mystic work suspended, sweet converse
reigns supreme,
And Fellowship, which is our richest gem,
Is set in Love cemented, and its iridescent gleam,
Lights to brilliancy our dazzling diadem.
From Labor to Refreshment - 'tis the Great
Grand Master's call
When our labors in the earthly Lodge are o'er,
And he takes us through the portals of His Grand Celestial Hall,
There to live in sweet refreshment evermore.
There we shall see completed all the Master's
wise designs,
No longer need the level and the square;
And there will ho no longer any need of grips or signs,
For we shall all be Brethren over there.
Nelson Williams, for the Committee.
OHIO MASONIC HOME
The officers and trustees of the Masonic
Home pre~nted their annual report, which is printed in the proceedings.
The number of residents during the past
year were: men, 71, average age 71 years; women, 50, average age 72
years; boys, 28, average age 11 years; girls, 22, 'average age 11 years;
total residents, 171. The amounts contributed by the several Ohio Grand
Masonic Bodies at their 1911 sessions were:
Grand Lodge . . . . . . . . $44,849.90
Chapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11,643.50
Council . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,000.00
Commandery . . . . . . . . . .4,000.00
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $62,493.40
The following is a statement of the Christmas
and Entertainment Fund:
August 1, 1911, Balance on hand . . . .
. . . $472.78
August 1, 1912, Received to date . . . . . . . . 870.28
Interest to July 1, 1912 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14.62
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,357.68
Disbursements to Aug. 1, 1912 . . . . . . . . . .765.88
Balance, August 1, 1912 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$591.80
The various Subordinate Masonic Bodies
and individual Masons contributed during the year to the Home Improvement
Fund for refurnishing rooms, etc., the sum of $17,117.91.
The Grand Chapter of Ohio Order of the
Eastern Star donated for repairs and additions to the Hospital the sum
of $3,012.59.
A large number of donations were made by
the various Subordinate Masonic Bodies, Chapters of the Eastern Star,
and individual Masons, which are set out in detail in the report, but
are too numerous to mention here.
The following table shows the receipts,
expenditures and balances in each of the funds beginning August 1, 1911,
and terminating August 1, 1912:
Funds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Balances July 31,
1911 . . . . . . . Receipts . . . . . . . Disbursements . . . . . .
. Balances July, 31 1912
General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,385.69 . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . $44,182.80 . . . . . . . $38,794.84 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. $13,753.65
Endowment . . . . . . . . . . 148,471.89 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .5,731.76 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 152,203.65
Ground Improvement . . . . 2,299.35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,099.40
. . . . . . . . . . .963.66 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2,435.15
Library . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,849.70 . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 77.58 . . . . . . . . . . . .74.09 . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . .1,853.19
Cemetery . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,591.89 . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 10.88 . . . . . . . . . 1,584.95 . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 17.82
W. C. Langenau . . . . . . . . . .515.10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . 20.80 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 535.90
Home Improvement . . . . . 2,945.23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17,117.91
. . . . . . . . 11,614.96 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8,448.18
Refurnishing . . . . . . . . . . .2,779.64 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . 2,021.85 . . . . . . . . . 8,151.63 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . .1,649.86
Hospital . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . .3,012.59 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . .3,012.59
Dormitory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 5,137.77 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .5,137.77
Huntington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . 2,288.49 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2,288.49
Totals . . . . . . . . . . . . . $166,818.49 . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . $80,701.89 . . . . . . . $59,196.72 . . . . . . . . . . . . . $188,323.66
It will be observed that the Endowment
Fund now amounts to the sum of $152,203.65.
The committee recommends the transfer of
$5,000.00 from the Home Improvement Fund to the Dormitory Fund, and
the transfer of $5,000.00 from the General Fund to the Dormitory Fund,
also the income from the Endowment Fund for the coming year.
The amounts contributed and donated by
the several Ohio Grand Masonic Bodies at their annual sessions in 1912,
were as follows:
Grand Lodge,
Per Capita Tax . . . . . . . $25,947.90
Dormitory Fund . . . . . . .15,000.00
General Fund . . . . . . . . . .5,000.00
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $45,947.90
Grand Chapter,
Per Capita Tax . . . . . . . $7,872.25
General Fund . . . . . . . . . 5,000.00
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12,872.25
Grand Council,
General Fund . . . . . . . $1,500.00
Cemetery Fund . . . . . . . . 500.00
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,000.00
Grand Commandery . . .4,000.00
Grand Total . . . . . . . $64,820.15
The Dormitory Fund was established by the
Grand Lodge at the 1911 communication as a nucleus for an amount sufficient
to erect and equip two dormitories, one for boys and one for the girls;
and the Grand Lodge appropriated $5,000.00 at that session and $15,000.00
at this (1912) session, which with the interest accrued, $137.77, makes
$20,137.77; and with the transfer of the $10,000.00 recommended by the
Auditing Committee brings the fund up to $30,137.77, enough to start
the work on the dormitories.
The returns from the farm, garden and hennery
during the past year amounted to the sum of $6,280.86.
IMPROVEMENTS
During the past few years very liberal
donations have been made by all the Masonic Bodies of both the York
and Scottish Rite, and including the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine and
the Order of the Eastern Star, for the purpose of making many needed
additions, repairs and improvements to the Home buildings and grounds,
and which have been noted in this history from time to time as they
progressed.
During the past year many valuable improvements
have been completed which practically cover every part of the main building
from basement to tower, and also the hospital and grounds.
OUR HOME CEMETERY
under the direction of Bro. Goodale, is
reported as approaching completion.
Members of Antioch Temple, Nobles of the
Mystic Shrine of Dayton, presented to the Home what are probably the
finest and most fully-equipped separate boys' and girls' playgrounds
in the United States, as a gift from Antioch Temple, erected at a cost
of over $1,200.
DONATIONS
Again, as in past years, it becomes a pleasing
duty to give credit and to acknowledge our appreciation and to extend
our sincere and hearty thanks to the Order of the Eastern Star for what
it has done for us during the past year, by its munificent contribution
of $3,000 to meet the expenses of modernizing and looking after much
needed repairing of the hospital.
The following is the roster of the Officers
and Board of Trustees of the Ohio Masonic Home, Springfield, 1912:
OFFICERS
James W. Iredell, Jr . . President
A. Frank Vance, Jr . . First Vice-President
Gibson H. Robinson . . Second Vice-President
Edward Harford . . Treasurer
John W. Parsons (Springfield) Secretary
Philip H. Dorn . . Superintendent
TRUSTEES
REPRESENTING THE GRAND LODGE
Leander Burdick . . . Toledo
Edward Harford . . . Springfield
Nelson Williams . . . Hamilton
Carroll F. Clapp . . . Warren
R. Arthur Worthington . . Springfield
Charles H. Voegele . . Mansfield
REPRESENTING THE GRAND CHAPTER
James W. Iredell, Jr . . . Cincinnati
Levi C. Goodale . . . Cincinnati
Gibson H. Robinson . . . Cleveland
REPRESENTING THE GRAND COUNCIL
Jacob H. Bromwell . . . Cincinnati
REPRESENTING THE GRAND COMMANDERY
Martin J. Houck . . . Dayton
John P. McCune . . . Columbus
A. Frank Vance, Jr . . . Urbana
REPRESENTING THE A. & A. SCOTTISH RITE
William B. Melish . . . Cincinnati
Matthew Smith . . . Cleveland
COMMITTEES
EXECUTIVE
Edward Harford
A. Frank Vance, Jr.
John P. McCune
Levi C. Goodale
R. Arthur Worthington
ADMISSION AND DISCHARGE
Gibson H. Robinson
Martin J. Houck
James W. Iredell, Jr.
Carroll F. Clapp
Matthew Smith
FINANCE
William B. Melish
Jacob H. Bromwell
Leander Burdick,
Nelson Williams
Charles H. Voegele
AUDITING
William B. Melish
Jacob H. Bromwell
Nelson Williams
RECOMMENDATION AS TO LODGES UNDER DISPENSATION
M.·. W.·. Bro. Levi C. Goodale
offered the following resolution, which was unanimously adopted:
Resolved, That it is the sense of this
Grand Body that hereafter all Lodges under dispensation applying to
this Grand Lodge for charters shall come before the Committee on Charters
and Dispensations on the day preceding the Annual Grand Communication
with a short historical preamble of the steps leading up to the acquiring
of a dispensation; copy of all their official transactions as a Lodge
under Dispensation properly transcribed in their minute books; and all
these accompanied by a duplicate copy of said transactions for the use
of the office of the Grand Secretary.
M.·. W.·. Bro. Nelson Williams
was re-appointed Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Correspondence
and M.·. W.·. Bro. A. B. Meldrum, Chairman of the Committee
on Necrology.
INSTALLATION OF GRAND OFFICERS
All of the officers elected and appointed,
with the exception of R.·. W.·. Bro. A. B. Meldrum, were
duly installed; M.·. W.·. Bro. Frank S. harmon acting
as Grand Master and M.·. W.·. Bro. B. F. Perry as Grand
Marshal.
On motion the Grand Secretary was authorized
to request the officers of Woodward Lodge No.508, to install R.·.
W.·. Bro. A. B. Meldrum as Grand Chaplain.
The Grand Lodge of Ohio was closed in Ample
Form, and with a benediction by Acting R.·. W.·. Grand
Chaplain C. G. Martin, the Lodge of Master Masons, which was opened
at the beginning of the session, was duly closed.
Complimentary Dinner to the Past Grand
Masters,
By M.·. W.·. Bro. LEANDER
BURDICK, P. G. M.
While not actually a part of the proceedings
of the M.·. W.·. Grand Lodge of Ohio at its One Hundred
and Third Annual Grand Communication, it would seem eminently proper
to insert therein a report of the dinner tendered by M.·. W.·.
Bro. Leander Burdick, the senior living Past Grand Master, to his associate
Past Grand Masters, the M.·. W.·. Grand Master, the R.·.
W.·. Deputy Grand Master and the R.·. W.·. Grand
Secretary on the evening of Tuesday, October 22, in the Boody Hotel.
All the invited guests were present except
M.·. W.·. Bro. Carroll F. Clapp, who was detained at home
by reason of the illness of his wife. With this exception, the unbroken
line of Past Grand Masters was complete and in attendance.
Brother Burdick was thoroughly qualified to act as host on this occasion
and there was not a minute of dullness or fatigue during the five hours
devoted to this feast of good things and flow of soul.
The guests were as follows:
PAST GRAND MASTERS
Leander Burdick, Levi C. Goodale, Allen
Andrews, Wm. B. Melish, Barton Smith, Nelson Williams, E. C. Gulliford,
E. L. Lybarger, Frank S. Harmon, Ike M. Robinson, W. A. Belt, O. P.
Sperra, C. G. Ballon, Lewis P. Sehaus, Horace A. Irvin, George D. Copeland,
C. S. Hoskinson, B. F. Perry and H. S. Kissell.
GRAND LODGE OFFICERS
M.·. W.·. Grand Master Thomas
B. Guitteau, R.·. W.·. Deputy Grand Master Edwin S. Griffiths
and R.·. W.·. Grand Secretary J. H. Bromwell.
This delightful occasion was closed by
all uniting in that good old Scotch song, "Auld Lang Syne,"
and each joined with others in the earnest wish that this remarkable
unbroken line of Past Grand Masters might continue, with new accessions
year by year, for many future Grand Communications of our Grand Lodge.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE OHIO MASONIC VETERANS'
ASSOCIATION
The Ohio Masonic Veterans' Association
met in its Forty-first Annual Meeting in the Blue Lodge Room, Masonic
Temple, Toledo, Ohio, at 6:30 P. M., October 23, 1912.
OFFICERS PRESENT
Ven. Bro. F. L. Lybarger, President; Ven.
Bro. J. H. Bromwell, First Vice-President; Ven. Bro. H. A. Irvin, Second
Vice-President; Ven. Bro. W. A. Belt, Third Vice-President; Ven. Bro.
F. C. Gulliford, Fourth Vice-President; Ven. Bro. Nelson Williams, Fifth
Vice-President; Ven. Bro. C. G. Ballon, Chaplain; Ven. Bro. E. H. Archer,
Secretary-Treasurer; Ven. Bro. L. P. Schaus, Marshal; Ven. Bro. W. B.
Melish, Master of Ceremonies; Ven. Bro. D. J. Caine, Inside Guard; Ven.
Bro. Henry Haws, Outer Guard.
Ven. Bro. Leander Burdick, Past President,
and twenty-five Brethren.
The record of the Fortieth Annual meeting
was admitted in print, read, and approved.
The Secretary-Treasurer submitted his annual
report, which was, on motion, adopted.
The Secretary reported the deaths of Venerable
Past President J. L'H. Long and Bro. E. B. Cox.
Eighty-five petitions were presented and
each petitioner declared duly elected.
The petitioners were, by the direction of the Venerable President, presented
by the Master of Ceremonies and Marshal, and duly received and greeted
as Venerable Brothers, and by his direction enrolled as Venerable Members
of this Association and each presented with a certificate of membership.
The President appointed Bro. Leander Burdick,
F. C. Gulliford and O. B. Hannan a committee to recommend nominations
for officers for the ensuing year. They submitted the following report
and election was held, and the following were duly elected:
Ven. Bro. H. A. Irvin, President; Ven.
Bro. W. A. Belt, First Vice-President; Ven. Bro. F. C. Gulliford, Second
Vice-President; Ven. Bro. Nelson Williams, Third Vice-President; Ven.
Bro. J. W. Moore, Fourth Vice-President; Ven. Bro. Ike M. Robinson,
Fifth Vice-President; Ven. Bro. F. H. Archer, Secretary-Treasurer; Ven.
Bro. C. G. Ballou Chaplain; Ven. Bro. W. B. Melish, Master of Ceremonies;
Ven. Bro. W. T. S. O'Hara, Marshal; Ven.
Bro. W. E. Joseph, Inner Guard; Ven. Bro. Ralph R. Rickly, Outer Guard.
Venerable Bro. Nelson Williams, poet laureate,
delivered a memorial to the memory of the deceased members, concluding
with the following:
THE DEAR OLD CRONIES
Brethren, let us pause a moment
In this consecrated hall;
Let us bow our heads in silence,
While we all our dead recall.
It is needless here to name them,
They were noble men and true;
And if you had gone before them,
They would say the same of you.
This is where they loved to linger,
With the inner man supplied,
And drink in the words of wisdom
From their Brethren true and tried.
But no more will they be with us
In this world of pain and care;
Theirs the gladness, ours the sadness
Till we meet them over there.
Yes, we miss these dear old Cronies'
We have known so long and well,
And our sorrow at their absence
Neither tongue nor pen can tell.
We shall miss them as the seasons,
With their changes, come and go,
And our hearts each year will sadden
As their vacant places show.
Dear old chums, of course we miss you,
And your places none can fill;
For we loved your genial faces
And your forms, now cold and still.
But while you have gone far from us,
Yet we have you ever near;
You are sleeping 'neath the cedars,
But have left your image here.
Some are here who soon must follow;
Others quickly follow them;
Who knows but that on the morrow
You may chant my requiem?
Brethren, if such be God's pleasure,
All that I can ask of thee
Is to judge my motives kindly,
And each year remember me.
Officers and Brethren then repaired to
the banquet room, and were most hospitably treated to a very satisfying
dinner, after which addresses were made by the retiring President, F.
L. Lybarger, and the newly elected President, H. A. Irvin, and Venerable
Bros. Deardorif, W. B. Melish, Thomas H. Isitt and Leander Burdick.
On motion of Venerable Bro. Belt, a hearty
and rising vote of thanks was given to the Brethren of Toledo for their
hospitality.
After an invocation by the Chaplain, the
forty-first meeting adjourned.
Time and Place of Next Meeting
The next Annual Grand Communication will
be held in the city of Columbus, Ohio, on the fourth Wednesday of October,
(22), 1913.
GRAND OFFICERS 1912-1913
Brother Edwin S. Griffiths, Cleveland,
M. Grand Master; Bro. Chas. I. Pretzman, Columbus, R.·. W.·.
Deputy Grand Master; Bro. Geo. L. Marshall, Dayton, R.·. W.·.
Senior Grand Warden; Bro. Frank H. Marquis, Mansfield, R.·. W.·.
Junior Grand Warden; Bro. Ralph R. Rickly, Columbus, R.·. W.·.
Grand Treasurer; Bro. T. H. Bromwell, Cincinnati, R.·. W.·.
Grand Secretary; Bro. A. B. Meldrum, Cleveland, R.·. W.·.
Grand Chaplain; Bro. Joel C. Clore, Cincinnati, R.·. W.·.
Grand Orator; Bro. Matthew Smith, Cleveland, R.·. W.·.
Grand Marshal; Bro. H. M. Hagelbarger, Akron, W. Senior Grand Deacon;
Bro. Clinton B. Wilcox, Sandusky, W. Junior Grand Deacon; Bro. A. B.
Fairchild, Ravenna, Grand Tyler; The proceedings for this year cover
492 pages, and are embellished with the cuts of twenty-five of the Ohio
Masonic Temples made from photographs secured by our R.·. W.·.
Grand Secretary. A cut of the other Masonic Temples in the state will
follow from year to year until all have been inserted.
The Masonic Temple at Columbus, now practically
completed, is one of the largest temples in the United States devoted
entirely to Masonic purposes, and will be opened, dedicated and consecrated
to Masonic uses this fall.
This closes the record of the Annual Communication
of 1912, being the one hundred and third Annual Grand Communication
of the Grand Lodge, and completes the history of the Grand Lodge from
its organization to the close of its 1912 Annual Communication, a record
of which the Craft in Ohio have every reason to be proud.
The history of Masonry in the Great Northwestern
Territory and state of Ohio, is contemporary with the settlement, civilization
and progress of this great commonwealth.
General Rufus Putnam, who was the first
Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Ohio, the leader and founder of the
first white settlement in the great Northwestern territory, at Marietta,
Ohio, April 8, A. D. 1788, and a Past Master of American Union Army
Lodge; and Captain Jonathan Heart, Commandant of Fort Harmar opposite
Marietta, a Past Grand Lecturer in Connecticut, being the Worshipful
Master of said American Union Lodge; and Benjamin Tupper, a Past Master
of Hampshire Lodge of Connecticut, who was a constant visitor of said
Army Lodge; and Bros. Thomas Stanley, Griffen Green, Robert Oliver,
William Stacy, William Buruham, and William Mills, met at Marietta,
June 28, 1790, and opened said American Union Lodge, elected said seven
Masons members of the Lodge, and thus established American Union Lodge
as the first Masonic Lodge in the great Northwestern territory. The
history of this and five other Lodges whose representatives formed and
organized the Grand Lodge of Ohio at Chillicothe, January 4, A. D. 1808,
is given in detail in the first volume of this history.
Following this settlement at Marietta by
General Rufus Putnam and his forty-seven associates, were settlements
at various places in the territory, among which was old Mingo Town,
about three miles below the present city of Steubenville, and the Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania in 1799 issued a warrant for a Lodge at that place;
at Cincinnati, and on September 8, 1791, the Grand Lodge of New Jersey
warranted Nova Cesarca Lodge at that place, afterwards consolidated
into N. C. Harmony Lodge No.2; at Warren, known as the Connecticut Western
Reserve, where the Grand Lodge of Connecticut at its communication in
1804, warranted Erie Lodge; at Chillicothe, where Scioto Lodge No.2,
was chartered by the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts in 1805; at Zanesville,
where Amity Lodge No.5 was warranted by the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania,
June 24, 1805; at Worthington, where New England Lodge No.4, was chartered
by the Grand Lodge of Connecticut, October 19, 1803, and at various
other points the pioneers from the eastern states founded settlements
and the resident Masons of such settlements secured charters from the
Grand Lodges from which they hailed and erected the Altars of Masonry
in the wilderness of this great territory. Thus from these sentiments
of brave, fearless, hardy pioneers has grown this great commonwealth
now numbering nearly five million souls, and from these few scattered,
weak Lodges, has sprung the 529 active Lodges with their 84,493 members;
thus civilization, religion and Masonry have traveled hand in band through
the length and breadth of this grand domain, showering their favors
and manifold blessings on all mankind within its borders, and carrying
its benign influence throughout the entire empire of the "Great
West," and beyond its borders to the "Isles of the Seas."
In the early days of the territory and
state of Ohio, Masonry furnished many of their prominent officials.
Space will not permit a detailed statement,
but this Grand Benevolent Institution in Ohio furnished the nation three
Presidents of the United States, eight members of the President's Cabinet,
six United States Senators; and the state, twelve Governors, and twelve
Judges of the Supreme Court.
One of its Grand Masters, General Lewis
Cass, moved to the territory of Michigan, and served as Grand Master
of the Grand Lodge of Michigan; as Governor of that territory from 1813
to 1831; as Secretary of War of the United States from 1831 to 1836;
as United States Minister to France from 1836 to 1842; as United States
Senator from 1845 to 1857; as Secretary of State of the United States
from 1857 to 1860, and was candidate for President of the United States
in 1848. Many other of our Brethren served the nation, state, districts
and counties in other prominent official positions too numerous to mention
in this history.
Others turned their faces toward the setting
sun, and with the star of empire westward wended their way, and rose
to distinction both in civil and Masonic life in their new homes, serving
in prominent official positions in nation and state, and in their Masonic
Grand Lodges from Grand Master down. Some of these visited their old
homes and our Grand Lodge during its sessions, and mention of their
fraternal reception will be found in the proceedings of the Grand Lodge
and this history.
In the Councils of the General Masonic
Bodies in both York and Scottish Rites, the influence of Ohio's gifted
and honored Masonic Brethren has always been felt and recognized.
Space will not permit us to enumerate in
detail their valuable and efficient services in every Grand and General
Grand Body in the York Rite, and we will have to confine ourselves to
the principal offices held by Ohio Masons in these exalted Masonic Bodies,
as follows:
YORK RITE
General Grand Encampment of Knights Templars
of the United States of America, now designated Grand Encampment of
Knights Templars of the United States of America.
JOHN SNOW
Was present representing St. John's Encampment
of Providence, R. I., at the convention held at Masons Hall in the city
of New York, June 20 and 21, A. D. 1816, which organized the General
Grand Encampment, and was elected General Grand Sword Bearer. Thomas
Smith Webb, who represented Boston Encampment, was elected Deputy Grand
Master.
In 1816 Webb and Snow came to Worthington,
Ohio, and engaged in business there. On March 14, 1818, Webb issued
to John Snow and others a dispensation authorizing the organization
of Mt. Vernon Encampment Knights Templars at Worthington, and it was
organized the next day. Sir Thomas Smith Webb, Sir John Snow and Sir
Fredrick Curtis, a Knight Templar hailing from Ireland, the only Knights
Templars known to be in Ohio, at that time, officiating. Sir Thomas
Smith Webb returned to Boston in August, 1818, on some business connected
with the enterprise of Snow and himself, and in July started to return
to Worthington, but died suddenly at Cleveland, Ohio, July 6, A. D.
1819.
At the next session of the General Grand
Encampment, 1819, John Snow was elected and installed as General Grand
Generalissimo, and served until 1826.
He served as Grand Master of this Grand
Lodge from 1819 to 1823.
EZ'RA GRISWOLD
Served as General Grand Sword Bearer, 1829
to 1832, and General Grand Standard Bearer, 1832 to 1835.
WILLIAM J. REESE
Knighted in Mt. Vernon Encampment No.1,
May 22, 1830; served as General Grand Senior Warden, 1835 to 1838; General
Grand Captain General, 1838 to 1841; General Grand Generalissimo, 1841
to 1844.
Served as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge
of Ohio, 1834 to 1842; as Grand High Priest of the Grand Chapter of
Ohio R. A. M. 1833 and 1835 to 1839; and M.·. Ill.·. Grand
Master of the Grand Council of Ohio, R. & S. M. 1834 to 1837.
Sir Wm. J. Reese issued the dispensations
for and organized the following Encampments of Knights Templars:
Cincinnati Encampment No.3, Cincinnati,
Ohio, December 30, 1839; Massillon Encampment No.4, Massillon, Ohio;
Clinton Encampment No.5, Mt. Vernon, Ohio, October 12, 1843; on April
26, 1842, for an Encampment at Versailles, Ky.; on January 2, 1840,
for an Encampment at Louisville, Ky.; on March 20, 1841, to the Encampment
at Lexington, Ky., to meet and resume its Masonic business and labors;
on June 3, 1841 to Mt. Vernon Encampment No.1, at Worthington, Ohio,
to meet and resume labor, no meeting having been held since May 22,
1830, when Sir Wm. J. Reese was Knighted in that Encampment.
REV. ROBERT PUNSHON
General Grand Prelate, 1841 to 1844. He
was a charter member of Cincinnati Encampment No.3; the M.·.
W.·. Grand Master of the Grand Council of Ohio, R. & S. M.,
from its organization in 1830 until 1833; and Grand Prelate of the Grand
Encampment of Ohio Knights Templars, 1844.
JOHN D. CALDWELL
Grand Recorder of the Grand Encampment
U. S. K. T., 1862 to 1871; Grand Secretary of the Grand Chapter of Ohio,
R. A. M. 1851 to 1869; Grand Recorder Grand Commandery of Ohio, K. T.,
1851 to 1869; Grand Secretary Grand Lodge of Ohio F. & A. M., 1851
to 1888.
KENT JARVIS
Grand Captain General Grand Encampment,
Knights Templars, U. S. A., 1865 to 1869; Grand Generalissimo, 1868
to 1871; Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery of Ohio Knights Templars,
1859 to 1863.
LAFAYETTE LYTTLE
Grand Captain General Grand Encampment,
U. S. A., Knights Templars, 1877 to 1880; Grand Commander, Grand Commandery
of Ohio Knights Templars, 1886.
WILLIAM B. HUBBARD
General Grand Captain General of the General
Grand Encampment Knights Templars, U. S. A., 1844 to 1847 and General
Grand Master of that Grand Body, 12 years, 1847 to 1859.
It was during his incumbency in the office
of General Grand Master, (at the Triennial Session of 1856, at Hartford,
Connecticut), that the Constitution of The General Grand Encampment
of Knights Templars and Appendant Orders for the United States of America,
was amended, and the name thereof changed to "The Grand Encampment
of Knights Templars of the United States of America," the title
"General" dropped from all its officers, the names and titles
of the State Grand Encampments changed to "Grand Commandery,"
and of the Subordinate Encampments to "Commandery" and the
titles of the officers of the state and Subordinate Encampments changed.
A number of other amendments and additions were adopted, which gave
rise to much dissatisfaction and dissension in the Grand and Subordinate
Encampments, resulting in a number of the Grand Encampments, Ohio among
them, terminating their connection with the General Body for a time,
but the difficulty was afterwards healed and all the Grand and Subordinate
Bodies renewed their allegiance to the Grand Encampment, and conformed
to the new Constitution as afterwards amended.
Brother W. B. Hubbard served as Grand Master
of the Grand Lodge of Ohio, 1850 to 1852, and Grand High Priest of the
Grand Chapter of Ohio, R. A. M., 1842 to 1846.
WILLIAM B. MELISH
Served as Grand Standard Bearer of the
Grand Encampment Knights. Templars, U. S. A., 1892 to 1895; Grand Junior
Warden, 1895 to 1898; Grand Senior Warden, 1898 to 1901; Grand Captain
General, 1901 to 1904; Grand Generalissimo, 1904 to 1907; Deputy Grand
Master, 1907 to 1910.
Sir Henry Warren Rngg, M. Em. . Grand Master,
departed this life July 21, A. D. 1910, and Sir William B. Melish, assumed
command and control of the Grand Encampment as Acting Grand Master until
the Triennial Conclave of the Grand Encampment held at Chicago, Ill.,
August 9th to 11th, A. D. 1910, at which he was unanimously elected
M.·. EM.·. Grand Master, and served as such until the
close of the Triennial Conclave held at Denver, Colorado, August 12th
to 15th, A. D. 1913.
Sir Wm. B. Melish served as Grand Commander
of the Grand Commandery of Ohio Knights Templars in 1890, having served
as Deputy Grand Commander in 1889, and Grand Generalissimo in 1888.
He served as Grand Master of the Grand
Lodge of Ohio F. & A. M. in 1895; Deputy Grand Master in 1894, and
Senior Grand Warden in 1892 and 1893.
He has also been an active member of, and
worker in, the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, having received the
Thirty-second Degree in Ohio Sovereign Consistory May 30, 1874, and
the Honorary Thirty-third Degree in the Supreme Council of the Northern
Masonic Jurisdiction, September 15, 1885.
He filled various offices in the Bodies
of the Rite at Cincinnati, Ohio, from 1876 to 1910, serving as Commander
in Chief of Ohio Sovereign Grand Consistory from 1895 to 1910.
He also served as Imperial Potentate of
the Imperial Council of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine from 1892 to
1893 and 1894 to 1895.
REV. JOHN M. WALDEN
Served as Grand Prelate of the Grand Encampment,
U. S., Knights Templars, 1910 to 1913.
GENERAL GRAND COUNCIL OF ROYAL AND SELECT
MASTERS OF THE UNITED STATES
ORESTES A. B. SENTER
Was present as the representative of the
Grand Council of Ohio, at the convention held at Detroit, Michigan,
August 25 to 28, 1880, and assisted in organizing the General Grand
Council; served as General Grand Treasurer, 1880 to 1886; General Grand
P. C. W., 1886 to 1889; General Deputy Grand Master, 1889 to 1891; and
General Grand Master, 1891 to 1894. Served as Ill. Grand Master of the
Grand Council of Ohio, R. & S. M., 1878 to 1879; as Grand High Priest
of the Grand Chapter of Ohio, R. A. M., 1893.
GRAFF M. ACKLIN
Served as General Grand Marshal of General
Grand Council, 1897 to 1900; General Grand Captain of the Guard, 1900
to 1903; General Grand P. C. of W., 1900 to 1906; General Deputy Grand
Master, 1906 to 1909; General Grand Master, 1909 to 1912; served as
Ill. Grand Master, Grand Council of Ohio, R. & S. M., 1890 to 1891;
as Grand High Priest of the Grand Chapter of Ohio, R. A. M., 1897.
NELSON WILLIAMS
Served as General Grand Sentinel of General
Grand Council, 1900 to 1903; as M.·.Ill.·. Master of the
Grand Council of Ohio, 1904; as Grand High Priest of the Grand Chapter
of Ohio, R. A. M., 1902 ; as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Ohio,
1897.
GENERAL GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS
OF THE UNITED STATES
REUBEN C. LEMMON
Served as General Grand Treasurer, 1880
to 1891; General Grand King, 1891 to 1894; Deputy General Grand High
Priest, 1894 to 1897 M.·.EX.·. General Grand High Priest,
1897 to 1900.
Also served as Grand High Priest of the
Grand Chapter of Ohio, R. A. M., 1875 to 1876; Grand Master of the Grand
Lodge of Ohio, 1879 to 1880.
JOHN D. CALDWELL
General Grand Secretary, 1865 to 1871.
REV. ROBERT PUNSHON
General Grand Chaplain, 1841 to 1844.
SCOTTISH RITE
Supreme Council, Thirty-Third Degree, of
the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite for the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction
of the United States of America.
KILLIAN VAN RENSSELAER
Served as Ill. Grand Master of Ceremonies
of the Supreme Council, Thirty-third Degree, 1848 to 1851; as Ill. Deputy
for Western Pennsylvania and Ohio, 1851 to 1860; as P. Lieutenant Grand
Commander, 1860 to 1862; as M. P. Sovereign Grand Commander, 1862 until
May 17, A. D. 1867, when at the Union of the United Supreme Councils
he resigned, and
Josiah H. Drummond of Portland, Maine,
was elected by the United Supreme Councils M. P. Sovereign Grand Commander.
He was an active, earnest worker in the cause of Masonry to the date
of his death, which occurred January 29, 1881. Sov. Grand Commander,
Henry L. Palmer in announcing his death among other things, said: "Undoubtedly
he did more than any other man, dead or alive, towards popularizing
the Ancient Accepted Bite." The Supreme Council Thirty-third Degree
for England, Wales and the Dependencies of the British Crown sent a
letter of condolence to our Supreme Council in which it testified to
his eminent Services for the Bite.
In 1851 Brother Van Rensselaer instituted
Adoniram Lodge of Perfection, and a Council of the Princes of Jerusalem
at Columbus, the first Bodies of the Bite organized west of Albany,
New York. In 1852, Enoch T. Carson, George Hoadly, John H. Gerard, Absalom
Death, Charles Brown, John A. Conn and George B. Cramer, having taken
the Degrees at Columbus, petitioned the Supreme Council for a dispensation
to open a Lodge of Perfection and Council of Princes of Jerusalem at
Cincinnati, which was granted, and those Bodies instituted by Ill. Bro.
K. H. Van Rensselaer on April 27, 1853, and on his recommendation a
dispensation was granted to, and he instituted Ohio Sovereign Grand
Consistory, Thirty-second Degree, at Cincinnati, Ohio, December 27,
1853, which was the first Consistory instituted west of New York, and
afterwards became one of the largest Consistories in the world, and
from which sprang the other four great Consistories in Ohio.
The Lodge of Perfection and Council of
the Princes of Jerusalem at Columbus flourished several years, and finally
ceased work and surrendered their charters, and other Bodies were later
instituted and chartered and are now in a flourishing condition, as
is also Scioto Sovereign Consistory, Thirty-second Degree, located there.
ENOCH TERRY CARSON
Served as Illustrious Deputy of Supreme
Council, Thirty-third Degree, for Ohio and Indiana, 1860 to 1867, when
Indiana was made a separate district; and as Deputy for Ohio, from 1867
to 1899. As Deputy he organized the first Scottish Bite Bodies in Indiana,
and instituted the Sovereign Consistory at Indianapolis, Indiana, in
1864. Was a charter member of Ohio Sovereign Consistory at its organization,
December 27, 1853, and served as its Commander in Chief, from 1857 to
1895, when he declined re-election.
He was a member of the Union of the Supreme
Councils, Thirty-third Degree, May 17, 1867; served as P. Lieutenant
Commander of the Supreme Council, 1870 to 1876; served as Grand Commander
of the Grand Commandery of Ohio Knights Templars, 1871 to 1874; and
enjoyed the distinction of being elected Grand Commander from the floor
by the Grand Cornmandery of Ohio; served as Chairman of Foreign Correspondence
Committee of the Grand Commandery of Ohio, 1876 to 1898.
HEMAN ELY
Served as Grand Treasurer General of the
Supreme Council, Thirty-third Degree, A. A. S. R., N. M. J., 1867 to
1891, re-elected in 1891, but declined on account of ill health, and
a resolution of respect was unanimously adopted. Be was one of the members
of the union of May 17, 1867; served as Grand Commander of the Grand
Commandery of Ohio Knights Templars, 1864 to 1870.
BARTON SMITH
Served as Illustrious Deputy of the Supreme
Council for Ohio, 1906 to 1909; as P. Lieutenant Commander of the Supreme
Council, 1909 to 1910. At the close of the ninety-eighth annual meeting
of that Body, held at Detroit, Michigan, on September 22, A. D. 1910,
General Samuel F. Lawrence, M. P. Sovereign Grand Commander, tendered
his resignation to take effect at the close of the session, and Illustrious
Barton Smith succeeded him as M. P. Sovereign Grand Commander. At the
annual meeting held at Boston, Massachusetts, September 30, A. D. 1912,
was re-elected for the ensuing term of three years, and is still acting
as such. He represented the Supreme Council as one of its Delegates
at the International Conference of the Supreme Councils of the World,
held at Brussels, Belgium, June 10 to 15, A. D. 1907.
He served as Grand Commander of the Grand
Commandery of Ohio Knights Templars, in 1896; Deputy Grand Master, in
1895; and as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Ohio, in 1896.
Truly a Masonic record of which Ohio may well be proud!
ADDENDA
The following Lists, Tables, Statistics
and other Masonic Information, are added as matters of ready reference,
and will be found very convenient to the Craft, furnished in a condensed
form, saving valuable time and labor in searching through the history
for the facts therein contained.
LIST OF SUBJECTS
1. Statistics of membership by counties,
1912.
2. List of the elective Grand Lodge Officers of Ohio, from 1808 to 1912.
3. List of the appointive Grand Lodge Officers of Ohio, from 1808 to
1912.
4. List of Grand Lodge Officers of Ohio, from 1808 to 1889, which offices
were abolished or ceased.
5. List of active Lodges under the Grand Lodge of Ohio, 1912, in numerical
order giving number, name and location.
6. List of active Lodges under the Grand Lodge of Ohio, 1912, giving
location in alphabetical order and date of charter.
7. List of extinct Lodges under Grand Lodge of Ohio, giving date of
charter and of surrender of charter.
8. Number of members and time and place of meeting of the Grand Lodge
each year from 1808 to 1912.
9. List of Army Lodges.
10. Description of the proposed Grand Lodge Hall at Lancaster, Ohio,
1838.
TOTAL MEMBERSHIP BY COUNTIES, 1912
Adams 362 . . . . . . . . Hamilton 9,530 . . . . . Noble
296
Allen 823 . . . . . . . . . .Hancock 385 . . . . . . .Ottawa 374
Ashland 347 . . . . . . . Hardin 672 . . . . . . . . Paulding 294
Ashtabula 1,437 . . . . Harrison 347 . . . . . . . Perry 761
Athens, 1,078 . . . . . . Henry 421 . . . . . . . . . Pickaway 460
Auglaize 345 . . . . . . .Highland 482 . . . . . . . Pike 119
Belmont 1,720 . . . . . Hocking 142 . . . . . . . .Portage 788
Brown 525 . . . . . . . . Holmes 148 . . . . . . . . Preble 436
Butler 802 . . . . . . . . .Huron 1,056 . . . . . . . Putnam 499
Carroll 234 . . . . . . . .Jackson 519 . . . . . . . .Richland 1,363
Champaign 821 . . . . Jefferson 875 . . . . . . . Ross 601
Clark 1,107 . . . . . . . .Knox 843 . . . . . . . . . .Sandusky 450
Clermont 1,042 . . . . .Lake 497 . . . . . . . . . . Scioto 643
Clinton 495 . . . . . . . .Lawrence 441 . . . . . . .Seneca 842
Columbiana 1,512 . . .Licking 1,377 . . . . . . .Shelby 325
Coshocton 412 . . . . . Logan 745 . . . . . . . . . Stark 1,635
Crawford 722 . . . . . . Lorain 1,195 . . . . . . . .Summit 1,665
Cuyahoga 9,189 . . . . Lucas 3,469 . . . . . . . . Trumbull 1,067
Darke 719 . . . . . . . . .Madison 595 . . . . . . . .Tuscarawas 844
Defiance 535 . . . . . . .Mahoning 1,230 . . . . . Union 368
Delaware 685 . . . . . . Marion 714 . . . . . . . . .Van Wert 320
Erie 802 . . . . . . . . . . Medina 555 . . . . . . . . .Vinton 269
Fairfield 750 . . . . . . .Meigs 503 . . . . . . . . . . Warren 634
Fayette 410 . . . . . . . .Mercer 307 . . . . . . . . . Washington 969
Franklin 4,962 . . . . . Miami 1,058 . . . . . . . . Wayne 555
Fulton 573 . . . . . . . . Monroe 406 . . . . . . . . .Williams 636
Gallia 471 . . . . . . . . .Montgomery 2,537 . . . Wood 770
Geauga 274 . . . . . . . .Morgan 552 . . . . . . . . Wyandot 698
Greene 524 . . . . . . . . Morrow 286. . . . . . . .------------------
Guernsey 682 . . . . . . Muskingum 1,574 . . . .Total 86,493
LIST OF ACTIVE LODGES UNDER GRAND LODGE OF OHIO, 1912, GIVING NAME,
NUMBER AND LOCATION.
NUMBER - NAME - LOCATION - COUNTY - CHART DATE
1 American Union - Marietta - Washington - Jan. 05, 1816
2 N. C. Harmony - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Jan. 06, 1809
3 Old Erie - Warren - Trumbull - Oct. 18, 1854
4 New England - Worthington - Franklin - Jan. 05, 1814
5 Amity - Zanesville - Muskingum - Jan. 15, 1812
6 Scioto - Chillicothe - Ross - Jan. 15, 1812
7 Morning Dawn - Gallipolis - Gallia - Jan. 05, 1810
8 Harmony - Urbana - Champaign - Feb. 06, 1815
9 Mt. Zion - Mt. Vernon - Knox - Jan. 08, 1810
11 Center Star - Granville - Licking - Jan. 06, 1813
12 Unity - Revenna - Portage - Oct. 22, 1852
13 St. Johns - Dayton - Montgomery - April 07, 1810
14 Franklin - Troy - Miami - Jan. 05, 1815
15 Cleveland City - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 19, 1842
16 Belmont - St. Clairsville - Belmont - June 15, 1812
17 Washington - Hamilton - Butler - Jan. 06, 1813
18 Hiram - Delaware - Delaware - Jan. 21, 1811
19 Jerusalem - Hartford - Trumbull - Jan. 14, 1814
20 Magnolia - Columbus - Franklin - Oct. 20, 1847
21 Western Star - Youngstown - Mahoning - Jan. 04, 1816
22 Rising Sun - Ashtabula - Ashtabula - Oct. 23, 1845
23 Pickaway - Circleville - Pickaway - Jan. 03, 1815
24 Warren - Piqua - Miami - Oct. 21, 1841
25 Paramuthia - Athens - Athens - Jan. 14, 1814
26 Lebanon - Lebanon - Warren - Jan. 03, 1815
28 Temple - Painsville - Lake - Oct. 17, 1842
29 Clermont Social - Williamsburgh - Clermont - Jan. 04, 1816
30 Columbus - Columbus - Franklin - June - , 1815
33 Ebenezer - Wooster - Wayne - Jan. 13, 1819
35 Mansfield - Mansfield - Richland - Feb. 10, 1818
37 Mt. Moriah - Beverly - Washington - Feb. 14, 1819
38 Highland - Hillsboro - Highland - Jan. 09, 1817
40 Northern - Light - Maumee - Lucas - Dec. 21, 1818
43 West Union - West Union - Adam - Aug. 22, 1818
44 Columbia - Miami - Hamilton - Dec. 13, 1817
45 Steubenville - Steubenville - Jefferson - Jan. 24, 1820
46 Miami - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Jan. 10, 1818
47 Clinton - Massillon - Stark - June 22, 1837
48 Aurora - Portsmouth - Scioto - Dec. 15, 1820
49 Xenia - Xenia - Greene - Oct. 19, 1819
50 Science - Sandusky - Erie - Dec. 12, 1820
52 Wilmington - Wilmington - Clinton - Oct. 19, 1842
54 Milford - Milford - Clermont - Dec. 11, 1820
55 Eastern Star - Franklin - Warren - Dec. 15, 1820
56 King Solomon's - Elyria - Lorain - Dec, 12, 1821
57 Lancaster - Lancaster - Fairfield - Dec. 15, 1820
58 Medina - Medina - Medina - Dec. 23, 1820
59 Tuscarawas - Canal Dover - Tuscarawas - Oct. 24, 1845
60 Canton - Canton - Stark - Oct. 12, 1821
61 Bethel - Bethel - Clermont - Oct. 12, 1821
64 Mount Vernon Norwalk - Huron - Dec. 12, 1821
65 New Lisbon - Lisbon - Columbiana - Oct. 20, 1859
66 Cambridge - Cambridge - Guernsey - Oct. 08, 1850
67 Oxford - Oxford - Butler - June 18, 1822
70 Marion - Marion - Marion - Oct. 21, 1841
71 Union - Ripley - Brown - Sept. 15, 1840
72 Georgetown - Georgetown - Brown - Oct. 17, 1839
73 Temperance - Sidney - Shelby - Jan. 20, 1826
74 Seville - Seville - Medina - Oct. 19, 1842
76 Somerset - Somerset - Perry - Jan. 10, 1836
77 Tiffin - Tiffin - Seneca - Oct. 19, 1842
78 Leesburg - Leesburg - Highland - Oct. 14, 1842
79 La Fayette - Zanesyille - Muskingum - Jan. 10, 1826
80 Libanus - Lewisburg - Preble - Oct. 23, 1845
81 La Fayette - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Jan. 11, 1826
82 Bolivar - Eaton - Preble - Jan. 08, 1827
83 Akron - Akron - Summit - Oct. 21, 1841
85 Jackson - Brownsville - Licking - Oct. 21, 1841
88 King Hiram - W. Alexandria - Preble - Oct. 19, 1842
89 Friendship - Barnesyille - Belmont - Oct. 15, 1828
90 Jefferson - Middletown - Butler - Jan. 15, 1828
91 Western Sun - Wheelersburg - Scioto - Oct. 21, 1847
93 Chardon - Chardon - Geauga - Oct. 18, 1842
94 Montgomery - Montgomery - Hamilton - Jan. 16, 1828
96 Coshocton - Coshocton - Coshocton - June 26, 1846
97 Newark - Newark - Licking - Jan. 05, 1829
98 Minerva - Miamisburg - Montgomery - Oct. 22, 1842
100 New Carlisle - New Carlisle - Clark - Oct. 18, 1850
101 Clark - Springfield - Clark - Sept. 28, 1848
102 Felicity - Felicity - Clermont - Oct. 19, 1839
103 Dresden - Dresden - Muskingum - Oct. 19, 1839
104 Batavia - Batavia - Clermont - June 20, 1838
105 Moriah - Powhatan - Point - Belmont - Oct. 18, 1842
106 Fellowship - New Paris - Preble - Oct. 20, 1840
107 Fayette - Washington C. H. - Fayette - Oct. 20, 1840
108 Wakatomica - West Carlisle - Coshocton - Oct. 22, 1840
111 Corinthian - McConnelsville - Morgan - Oct. 24, 1843
112 Wood County - Bowling Green - Wood - Oct. 17, 1843
113 Mechanicsburg Mechanicsburg - Champaign - Oct. 23, 1843
115 Hanover - Loudonville - Ashland - Oct. 25, 1844
116 Hebron - Hebron - Licking - Oct. 25, 1844
118 Malta - Norwich - Muskingum - Oct. 25, 1844
119 Goshen - Goshen - Clermont - Oct. 25, 1844
120 McMakin - Mt. Healthy - Hamilton - Oct. 25, 1844
121 Mercer - St. Marys - Auglaize - Oct. 25, 1844
122 Moscow - Moscow - Clermont - Oct. 25, 1844
123 Phoenix - Perrysburg - Wood - Oct. 25, 1844
124 Carroll - Carrollton - Carroll - Oct. 25, 1844
126 Spartan - Millersburg - Holmes - Oct. 24, 1845
127 Wellington - Wellington - Lorain - Oct. 23, 1845
131 Vinton - Vinton - Gallia - Oct. 24, 1845
132 Trowel - Jackson - Jackson - Oct. 24, 1845
133 Cincinnati - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 24, 1846
134 Columbian - Cumberland - Guernsey - Oct. 23, 1846
135 Butlerville - Butlerville - Warren - Oct. 23, 1846
136 Sharon - Sharon - Noble - Oct. 23, 1846
137 Harrisville - Lodi - Medina - Oct. 23, 1846
138 Chandler - London - Madison - Oct. 23, 1846
140 Cheviot - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 20, 1847
141 McMillan - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 20, 1847
143 Greenville - Greenville - Darke - Oct. 27, 1847
144 Toledo - Toledo - Lucas - Oct. 27, 1847
145 Valley - Malta - Morgan - Oct. 23, 1847
147 Dayton - Dayton - Montgomery - Oct. 20, 1847
148 Mt. Olive - Chester Hill - Morgan - Oct. 21, 1847
149 Aberdeen - Aberdeen - Brown - Oct. 14, 1847
150 Buckeye - New Richmond - Clermont - Oct. 20, 1847
151 Ashland - Ashland - Ashland - Oct. 19, 1847
152 Venus - Mansfield - Richland - Oct. 20, 1847
153 Farmers - Fredonia - Licking - Sept. 22, 1848
154 Latham - Kenton - Hardin - Sept. 26, 1848
155 Cynthia - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 15, 1849
156 Albany - Albany - Athens - Sept. 27, 1848
157 Philodorean - Nelsonville - Athens - Sept. 28, 1848
158 Palestine - Marysville - Union - Sept. 28, 1848
159 Camden - Camden - Preble - Sept. 26, 1848
161 Mad River - West Liberty - Logan - Sept. 28, 1848
162 Yeatman - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Sept. 17, 1848
163 Waynesville - Waynesville - Warren - Sept. 29, 1848
164 Pomeroy - Pomeroy - Meigs - Sept. 27, 1848
165 Hildreth - Republic - Seneca - Sept. 28, 1848
166 Russellville - Russellville - Brown - Oct. 27, 1848
167 Hamer - Wapakoneta - Auglaize - Sept. 27, 1848
168 Covington - Covington - Miami - Sept. 29, 1848
169 Lithopolis - Lithopolis - Fairfield - Oct. 29, 1848
170 Thrall - Fredericktown - Knox - Oct. 18, 1849
171 Mingo - Logan - Hocking - Oct. 19, 1849
172 Done - Deavertown - Morgan - Oct. 19, 1849
174 Tippecanoe - Tippecanoe City - Miami - Oct. 27, 1850
175 Lone Star - Newcomerstown - Tuscarawas - Oct. 15, 1849
176 Warpole - Upper Sandusky - Wyandot - Oct. 17, 1850
177 New Philadelphia - New Philadelphia - Tuscarawas - Oct. 19, 1849
178 Lynchburg - Lynchburg - Highland - Oct. 15, 1849
179 Superior - West Unity - Williams - Oct. 16, 1849
180 Wellsville - Wellsville - Columbiana - Oct. 20, 1849
181 Bridgeport - Bridgeport - Belmont - Oct. 17, 1849
182 Smithfield - Smithfield - Jefferson - Oct. 15, 1849
184 Irville - Nashport - Muskingum - Oct. 18, 1850
185 Perry - Salem - Columbiana - Oct. 15, 1850
186 Wyoming - Wyoming - Hamilton - Oct. 18, 1850
187 Star - Cuyahoga Falls - Summit - Oct. 17, 1850
189 Monroe - Woodsfield - Monroe - Oct. 15, 1850
191 Blanchester - Blanchester - Clinton - Oct. 19, 1850
192 Fielding - South Charleston - Clark - April 24, 1850
193 Snow - Harrison - Hamilton - Oct. 15, 1850
194 Mystic Tie - Uhrichsville - Tuscarawas - July 15, 1850
195 Tu-en-da-wie - Defiance - Defiance - Oct. 18, 1850
196 Bambridge - Bambridge - Ross - Oct. 19, 1849
198 Lawrence - Ironton - Lawrence - Oct. 18, 1850
199 Ohio - Bladensburg - Knox - Oct. 28, 1851
201 Richiand - Plymouth - Richland - Oct. 25, 1851
202 Port Washington - Port Washington - Tuscarawas - Oct. 28, 1851
203 Marathon - Marathon - Clermont - Oct. 28, 1851
204 Sharonville - Sharonville - Hamilton - Oct. 27, 1851
205 Lima - Lima - Allen - Oct. 28, 1851
206 Mt. Gilead - Mt. Gilead - Morrow - Oct. 24, 1851
207 Delta - McArthur - Vinton - Nov. 10, 1851
208 Hanselmann - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 25, 1851
209 Bellefontaine - Bellefontaine - Logan - Oct. 28, 1851
210 Olive - Mt. Ephraim - Noble - Oct. 28, 1851
211 Rushville - Rushville - Fairfield - Oct. 30, 1851
213 Summit - Twinsburg - Summit - Oct. 28, 1851
214 Hope - Delphos - Allen - Oct. 01, 1851
215 Bryan - Bryan - Williams - Oct. 28, 1851
217 Social - Lena - Miami - Oct. 22, 1852
218 Van Wert - Van Wert - Van Wert - Oct. 22, 1852
219 Harrison - Cadiz - Harrison - Oct. 22, 1852
220 Hubbard - Adamsville - Muskingum - Oct. 22, 1852
221 Madison - West Jefferson - Madison - Oct. 22, 1852
222 Evergreen - Conneaut - Ashtabula - Oct. 22, 1852
224 Plainfleid - Plalifield - Coshocton - Oct. 20, 1852
225 Fort Stephenson - Fremont - Sandusky - Oct. 22, 1852
226 Mt. Olivet - Christiansburg - Champaign - Oct. 22, 1852
227 Findlay - Findlay - Hancock - Oct. 22, 1852
228 Hamer - Owensville - Clermont - Oct. 22, 1852
229 Iris - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 22, 1852
232 Lockbourne - Lockbourne - Franklin - Oct. 20, 1853
236 Winchester - Winchester - Adams - Oct. 20, 1853
237 Rubicon - Toledo - Lucas - Oct. 13, 1853
238 Chester - Chesterville - Morrow - Oct. 20, 1853
239 Erie - Milan - Erie - Oct. 20, 1853
240 Groveport - Groveport - Franklin - Oct. 20, 1853
241 Celina - Celina - Mercer - Oct. 20, 1853
243 Bigelow - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 18, 1854
244 Monticello - Clyde - Sandusky - Oct. 18, 1854
245 Golden Gate - Chagrin Falls - Cuyahoga - Oct. 19, 1854
246 Garrettsville - Garretteville - Portage - Oct. 19, 1854
247 East Liberty - East Liberty - Logan - Oct. 18, 1854
248 Fulton Delta - Fulton - Oct. 19, 1854
249 Newton - Raymond - Union - Oct. 19, 1854
250 New Lexington - New Lexington - Perry - Oct. 18, 1854
251 Hazen - Morristown - Belmont - Oct. 18, 1854
252 Webb - Stockport - Morgan - Oct. 18, 1854
253 Hoffner - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 19, 1854
254 Sardinia - Sardinia - Brown - Oct. 18, 1883
255 Warsaw - Warsaw - Coshocton - Oct. 17, 1854
256 Napoleon - Napoleon - Henry - Oct. 25, 1855
257 Germantown - Germantown - Montgomery - Oct. 26, 1856
258 Emery Loveland - Clermont - Oct. 20, 1854
259 Mineral Hamden - Vinton - Oct. 26, 1855
260 Floral New - London - Huron - Oct. 24, 1855
261 Fairfield - North Fairfield - Huron - Oct. 24, 1855
265 Morrow - Morrow - Warren - Oct. 24, 1855
266 Meridian Sun - West Richfield - Summit - Oct. 26, 1855
267 Bellaire - Bellaire - Belmont - Oct. 26, 1855
268 Blazing Star - North Lewisburg - Champaign - Oct. 25, 1855
269 Mount Sterling - Mt. Sterling - Madison - Oct. 25, 1855
271 Conrad - Alliance - Stark - Oct. 25, 1855
272 Arcana - Crestline - Crawford - Oct. 26, 1855
273 Bellevue - Bellevue - Huron - Oct. 26, 1855
274 Village - Burton - Geauga - Oct. 26, 1855
275 Orphan's Friend - Wilkesville - Vinton - Oct. 25, 1855
278 Allen - Columbiana - Columbiana - Oct. 18, 1855
277 Rock Creek - Rock Creek - Ashtsbula - Oct. 22, 1856
278 Ameaville - Amesville - Athens - Oct. 22, 1856
280 Kalida - Kalida - Putnam - Oct. 22, 1856
282 Pleasant Ridge - Pleasant Ridge - Hamilton - Oct. 22, 1856
283 Anchor - Duncan Falls - Muskingum - Oct. 23, 1856
284 Relief - Pierpont - Ashtabula - Oct. 22, 1856
285 Clemente Amitie - Reinenville - Morgan - Oct. 22, 1856
287 Sylvania - Sylvania - Lucas - Oct. 23, 1856
288 Fostoria - Fostoria - Seneca - Oct. 23, 1856
289 Grand Rapids - Grand Rapids - Wood - Oct. 23, 1856
290 Versailles - Versailles - Darke - Oct. 21, 1857
291 Licking - Utica - Licking - Oct. 21, 1857
292 Boggs - De Graff - Logan - Oct. 21, 1857
293 Bartlett - Bartlett - Washington - Oct. 21, 1857
295 Ithaca - Arcanum - Darke - Oct. 21, 1857
296 Western Phoenix - Parkman - Geauga - Oct. 21, 1857
298 Flushing - Flushing - Belmont - Oct. 21, 1857
300 Stafford Stafford - Monroe - Oct. 22, 1858
301 Gibson - Wakeman - Huron - Oct. 21, 1858
302 Willoughby - Willoughby - Lake - Oct. 21, 1858
303 Mt. Cannel - Richwood - Union - Oct. 21, 1858
305 Stokes Port - Jefferson - Shelby - Oct. 21, 1858
306 Acadia - Spencerville - Allen - Oct. 21, 1858
307 Lake Shore - Madison - Lake - Oct. 21, 1858
308 Aurelius - Macksburg - Washington - Oct. 20, 1859
309 Frankfort - Frankfort - Ross - Oct. 20, 1859
310 Eden - Bloomville - Seneca - Oct. 20, 1859
311 Urania - Plain City - Madison - Oct. 20, 1859
312 Harveysburg - Harveysburg - Warren - Oct. 20, 1859
313 Sullivan - Sullivan - Ashland - Oct. 20, 1859
314 Wyandot - McCutchenville - Wyandot - Oct. 20, 1859
315 Riddle - East Liverpool - Columbiana - Oct. 20, 1859
316 Rockton - Kent - Portage - Oct. 20, 1859
317 Manchester - Manchester - Adams - Oct. 20, 1859
318 Greenfield - Greenfield - Highland - Oct. 20, 1859
321 Orient - Waverly - Pike - Oct. 17, 1860
322 East Townsend - Collins - Huron - Oct. 17, 1860
323 Clarksville - Clarksville - Clinton - Oct. 19, 1860
324 Sabina - Sabina - Clinton - Oct. 17, 1860
325 Ottawa - Ottawa - Putnam - Oct. 17, 1860
326 Center - Johnstown - Licking - Oct. 18, 1860
329 Perseverance - Sandusky - Erie - Oct. 18, 1860
330 Caldwell - Bolivar - Tuscarawas - Oct. 20, 1860
332 Edenton - Edenton - Clermont - Oct. 18, 1860
333 Unionport - Unionport - Jefferson - Oct. 16, 1861
334 Geneva - Geneva - Ashtabula - Oct. 16, 1861
335 Antwerp - Antwerp - Paulding - Oct. 16, 1861
336 Brainard - Fremont - Sandusky - Oct. 16, 1861
337 Coolville - Coolville - Athens - Oct. 16, 1861
338 New Home - Hanover - Licking - Oct. 21, 1862
339 Blendon - Westerville - Franklin - Oct. 21, 1862
340 Reynoldsburg - Reynoldsburg - Franklin - Oct. 21, 1862
341 O. H. Perry - Port Clinton - Ottawa - Oct. 21, 1862
342 Tuscan - Jefferson - Ashtabula - Oct. 21, 1862
343 Nevada - Nevada - Wyandot - Oct. 21, 1862
344 Ada - Ada - Hardin - Oct. 20, 1863
345 Concordia - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 18, 1864
346 North Bend - Cleves - Hamilton - Oct. 18, 1864
347 Belle Center - Belle Center - Logan - Oct. 18, 1864
348 Salineville - Salineville - Columbiana - Oct. 29, 1864
349 Wauseon - Wauseon - Fulton - Oct. 18, 1864
350 Shelby - Shelby - Richland - Oct. 18, 1864
351 Portage - Elmore - Ottawa - Oct. 20, 1865
352 Jamestown - Jamestown - Greene - Oct. 18, 1865
353 Orion - Kingsville - Ashtabula - Oct. 16, 1865
354 Somerton - Somerton - Belmont - Oct. 19, 1865
355 Pharos - St. Paris - Champaign - Oct. 15, 1866
356 Kilwinning - Cincinnati - Hamilton Oct. 11, 1866
357 Edgerton - Edgerton - Williams - Oct. 17, 1866
359 Marks - Huron - Erie - Oct. 17, 1866
360 Point Pleasant - Pleasant City - Guernsey - Oct. 17, 1866
361 Pleasant Hill - Pleasant Hill - Miami - Oct. 17, 1866
362 Sunsbury - Beallsville - Monroe - Oct. 17, 1866
363 Middleport - Middleport - Meigs - Oct. 16, 1866
364 Rufus Putnam - Columbus Grove - Putnam - Oct. 17, 1866
365 Sinking Spring - Sinking Spring - Highland - Oct. 17, 1866
366 Portland - Oak Hill - Jackson - Oct. 16, 1866
367 Attica - Attica - Seneca - Oct. 16, 1866
368 Muskingum - Fultonham - Muskingum - Oct. 17, 1866
369 Excelsior - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 16, 1866
370 Tyrian - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 16, 1866
371 Centerville - Thurman - Gallia - Oct. 16, 1866
372 Goodale - Columbus - Franklin - Oct. 17, 1866
373 Higginsport - Higginsport - Brown - Oct. 16, 1867
374 Matamoras - New Matamoras - Washington - Oct. 16, 1867
375 Bedford - Bedford - Cuyahoga - Oct. 16, 1867
376 Bellville - BeIlville - Richland - Oct. 17, 1867
377 Shanes - Roekford - Mercer - Oct. 17, 1867
378 Senate - Forest - Hardin - Oct. 16, 1867
379 Newburgh - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 16, 1867
380 Oberlin - Oberlin - Lorain - Oct. 16, 1867
381 Litchfield - Litchfield - Medina - Oct. 16, 1867
382 Berea Berea - Cuyahoga - Oct. 16, 1867
384 Cardington - Cardington - Morrow - Oct. 15, 1867
385 Wadsworth - Wadsworth - Medina - Oct. 16, 1867
386 Vattier - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 16, 1867
387 Gorham - Fayette - Fulton - Oct. 16, 1867
388 Forest City - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 16, 1867
390 Harmar - Marietta - Washington - Oct. 16, 1867
391 Martinsville - Martinsville - Clinton - Oct. 16, 1867
392 New Holland - New Holland - Pickaway - Oct. 16, 1867
394 Mahoning - Niles - Trumbull - Oct. 16, 1867
396 Sanford L. Collins - Toledo - Lucas - Oct. 16, 1867
397 Harts Grove - Harts Grove - Ashtabula - Oct. 16, 1857
398 West Salem - West Salem - Wayne - Oct. 21, 1868
399 Lagrange - Lagrange - Lorain - Oct. 21, 1868
400 Sparrow - Sunbury - Delaware - Oct. 21, 1868
401 Leetonia - Leetonia - Columbiana - Oct. 21, 1868
402 Wilishire - Willshire - Van Wert - Oct. 21, 1868
404 Pataskala - Pataskala - Licking - Oct. 21, 1868
405 Mystic - Dayton - Montgomery - Oct. 21, 1868
406 Orange - Leesville - Carroll - Oct. 21, 1868
407 Ashley - Ashley - Delaware - Oct. 19, 1868
408 Sandy Valley - Hanoverton - Columbiana - Oct. 21, 1868
411 Harrisonville - Harrisonville - Meigs - Oct. 21, 1868
413 Fort Black - New Madison - Darke - Oct. 21, 1868
414 Galion - Galion - Crawford - Oct. 21, 1868
415 Freeport - Freeport - Harrison - Oct. 21, 1868
416 Caledonia - New Albany - Franklin - Oct. 21, 1868
417 East Palestine - East Palestine - Columbiana - Oct. 21, 1868
418 Rawson - Rawson - Hancock - Oct. 21, 1868
419 Madisonville - Madisonville - Hamilton - Oct. 21, 1868
420 Carey - Carey - Wyandot - Oct. 21, 1868
421 Yellow Springs - Yellow Springs - Greene - Oct. 21, 1868
422 Bloomfield - Centerburg Knox - Oct. 21, 1868
424 Ely - Vermilion - Erie - Oct. 20, 1869
425 Summerfield - Summerfield - Noble - Oct. 20, 1869
426 Constitution - New Marshfield - Athens - Oct. 20, 1869
427 Green Spring - Green Spring - Seneca - Oct. 20, 1869
428 Gerard - Newtown - Hamilton - Oct. 20, 1869
429 Masterton - Masterton - Monroe - Oct. 20, 1869
430 Cedar - Orrville - Wayne - Oct. 20, 1869
431 Wm. McKinley - Canton - Stark - Oct. 20, 1869
432 Bluffton - Bluffton - Allen - Oct. 20, 1869
433 Genoa - Genoa - Ottawa - Oct. 20, 1869
434 Royalton - Union Lyons - Fulton - Oct. 20, 1869
435 New Harmony - Mt. Orab - Brown - Oct. 20, 1869
436 Lowell - Lowell - Washington - Oct. 20, 1869
437 J. B. Covert - Tobasco - Clermont - Oct. 18, 1870
438 Ionic - Bellaire - Belmont - Oct. 16, 1870
439 Thatcher - Nottingham - Cuyahoga - Oct. 19, 1870
441 Pioneer - Pioneer - Williams - Oct. 19, 1870
442 Gustavus - Kinsman - Trumbull - Oct. 19, 1870
444 Prospect - Prospect - Marion - Oct. 19, 1870
445 Monitor - Sayler Park - Hamilton - Oct. 18, 1870
446 Kirkwood - Hendrysburg - Belmont - Oct. 19, 1870
447 Oliver - Caledonia - Marion - Oct. 19, 1870
448 Gage and Gavel - Chandlersville - Muskingum - Oct. 19, 1870
449 Bloomingburg - Bloomingburg - Fayette - Oct. 19, 1870
451 Tontogany - Tontogany - Wood - Oct. 22, 1870
452 Symbol - New Lyme - Ashtabula - Oct. 19, 1871
453 Shade River - Chester - Meigs - Oct. 22, 1870
454 Brooklyn - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 18, 1871
455 Anthony - Springfield - Clark - Oct. 18, 1871
456 Siloam - Cheshire - Gallia - Oct. 18, 1871
457 Collingwood - West Toledo - Lucas - Oct. 18, 1871
458 Jackson Center - Jackson Center - Shelby - Oct. 16, 1872
459 Noble - Caldwell - Noble - Oct. 17, 1872
460 Juilliard - Louisville - Stark - Oct. 17, 1872
461 Racine - Racine - Meigs - Oct. 18, 1872
462 Newton Falls - Newton Falls - Trumbull - Oct. 17, 1872
463 LaRue - LaRue - Marion - Oct. 16, 1872
464 Acacia - Wilkins - Licking - Oct. 17, 1872
465 Lucasville - Lucasville - Scioto - Oct. 16, 1872
466 Savannah - Guysville - Athens - Oct. 16, 1872
468 Jeffersonville - Jeffersonville - Fayette - Oct. 21, 1873
469 Galfia - Chambersburg - Gallia - Oct. 22, 1873
470 Bishopville - Bishopville - Morgan - Oct. 22, 1873
471 Jenkins - Irondale - Jefferson - Oct. 22, 1873
472 Zaleski - Zaleski - Vinton - Oct. 22, 1873
474 Edon - Edon Williams - Oct. 22, 1873
475 Baltimore - Baltimore - Fairfield - Oct. 22, 1873
476 Humboldt - Columbus - Franklin - Oct. 22, 1873
477 Gettysburg - Gettysburg - Darke - Oct. 21, 1874
478 Hickaville - Hickaville - Defiance - Oct. 21, 1874
481 Hulman - Youngstown - Mahoning - Oct. 21, 1874
482 Farmersyille - Farmersville - Montgomery - Oct. 21, 1874
483 Walnut Hills - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 21, 1874
484 New Straitsvllle - New Straitsville - Perry - Oct. 21, 1874
485 Ontario - Ontario - Richiand - Oct. 21, 1874
486 Ohio City - Martins Ferry - Belmont - Oct. 21, 1874
488 Ansoma - Ansonia - Darke - Oct. 24, 1874
489 Dover - Dover - Cuyahoga - Oct. 21, 1874
490 Frazeysburg - Frazeysburg - Muskingum - Oct. 21, 1874
493 Avery - Hilliard - Franklin - Oct. 21, 1874
495 Oak Harbor - Oak Harbor - Ottawa - Oct. 21, 1875
496 Patriot - Patriot - Gallia - Oct. 21, 1875
497 South Point - South Point - Lawrence - Oct. 21, 1875
498 Halcyon - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 21, 1875
499 Homeworth - Homeworth - Columbiana - Oct. 21, 1875
500 Quaker City - Quaker City - Guernsey - Oct. 21, 1875
501 Heber - Willianisport - Pickaway - Oct. 21, 1875
503 Stonington - Amherst - Lorain - Oct. 17, 1875
504 Augusta - Augusta - Carroll - Oct. 21, 1875
505 Ellsworth - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 21, 1875
506 Andover - Andover - Ashtabula - Oct. 21, 1875
507 Western Reserve - West Farmington - Trumbull - Oct. 21, 1875
508 Woodward - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 21, 1875
509 Amanda - Amanda - Fairfield - Oct. 18, 1876
510 Hudson - Hudson - Summit - Oct. 18, 1876
511 Evansport - Evansport - Defiance - Oct. 18, 1876
512 Leanore - Sedalia - Madison - Oct. 18, 1876
513 Sager - La Fayette - Allen - Aug. 18, 1876
514 Elliot - Canal Fulton - Stark - Nov. 17, 1876
515 Marseilles - Marseilles - Wyandot - Oct. 17, 1877
516 Pemberville - Pemberville - Wood - Oct. 17, 1877
517 Adoniram - Akron - Summit - Oct. 16, 1878
518 Liberty Center - Liberty Center - Henry - Oct. 16, 1878
519 Mt. Blanchard - Mt. Blanchard - Hancock - Oct. 16, 1878
520 Sycamore - Deshler - Henry - Oct. 22, 1879
521 Thornville - Thornville - Perry - Oct. 22, 1879
522 Wakeman - Waterville - Lucas - Oct. 22, 1879
524 Price Hill - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 19, 1882
525 Champaign - Urbana - Champaign - Oct. 18, 1882
526 Shawnee - Shawnee - Perry - Oct. 18, 1882
527 Adelphi - Adelphi - Ross - Oct. 18, 1882
528 Garfield - Shreve - Wayne - Oct. 18, 1882
529 Cortland - Cortland - Trumbull - Oct. 16, 1883
530 Charity - Palmyra - Portage - Oct. 16, 1883
531 Pleasant Valley - Pleasantville - Fairfield - Oct. 16, 1883
532 Waterloo - Waterloo - Lawrence - Oct. 17, 1883
533 Mantua - Mantua - Portage - Oct. 16, 1883
534 Roby - Monroeville - Huron - Oct. 22, 1884
535 Rome - Rome - Adams - Oct. 22, 1884
536 Ohio Valley - Crown City - Gallia - Oct. 22, 1884
537 Alturas - Millersport - Fairfield - Oct. 22, 1884
538 Black Diamond - Wellston - Jackson - Oct. 22, 1885
539 Fort Recovery - Fort Recovery - Mercer - Oct. 22, 1885
540 Potter Canal - Winchester - Franklin - Oct. 22, 1885
541 Weyer - Demos - Belmont - Oct. 22, 1885
542 Avon - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 22, 1885
543 Greenwich - Greenwich - Huron - Oct. 20, 1886
544 Shiloh - Shiloh - Richland - Oct. 20, 1886
545 Argus - Canfield - Mahoning - Oct. 20, 1886
546 Danville - Danville - Knox - Oct. 24, 1888
547 Montpelier - Montpelier - Williams - Oct. 24, 1888
548 Leipsic - Leipsic - Putnam - Oct. 24, 1888
549 Dunkirk - Dunkirk - Hardin - Oct. 24, 1888
550 Proctorville - Proctorvllle - Lawrence - Oct. 24, 1888
551 Tubal - Minerva - Stark - Oct. 23, 1889
552 Lorain - Lorain - Lorain - Oct. 23, 1889
553 Holgate - Holgate - Henry - Oct. 23, 1889
554 Acme - Newark - Licking - Oct. 23, 1889
555 Swanton - Swanton - Fulton - Oct. 23, 1889
556 Trinity - Bucyrus - Crawford - Oct. 19, 1892
557 Trimble - Trimble - Athens - Oct. 23, 1889
558 Harbor - Aebtabula - Ashtabula - Oct. 23, 1889
559 Queen City - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 16, 1890
560 Weston - Weston - Wood - Oct. 21, 1891
561 North Baltimore - North Baltimore - Wood - Oct. 21, 1891
562 Golden Rule - Chicago - Huron - Oct. 21, 1891
563 York - Columbus - Franklin - Oct. 21, 1891
564 Omega - Defiance - Defiance - Oct. 19, 1892
565 Negley - Negley - Columbiana - Oct. 19, 1892
566 Roseville - Roseville - Muskingum - Oct. 19, 1892
567 Linwood - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 19, 1892
568 National - Barberton - Summit - Oct. 19, 1893
569 Wayne - Waynesfield - Auglaize - Oct. 24, 1894
570 Continental - Continental - Putnam - Oct. 24, 1894
571 Widow's Son - Paulding - Paulding - Oct. 24, 1894
572 Yondota - Toledo - Lucas - Oct. 24, 1895
573 Carthage - Carthage - Hamilton - Oct. 24, 1895
574 New Burlington - New Burlington - Greene - Oct. 24, 1895
575 Gibsonburg - Gibsonburg - Sandusky - Oct. 24, 1895
576 Norwood - Norwood - Hamilton - Oct. 24, 1895
577 West Milton - West Milton - Miami - Oct. 22, 1896
578 Dalton - New Vienna - Clinton - Oct. 21, 1898
579 Enterprise - Sycamore - Wyandot - Oct. 20, 1898
580 Flat Rock - Payne - Paulding - Oct. 21, 1898
581 Peebles - Peebles - Adams - Oct. 21, 1898
582 Collinwood - Collinwood - Cuyahoga - Oct. 26, 1899
583 Toronto - Toronto - Jefferson - Oct. 26, 1899
584 Corning - Corning - Perry - Oct. 25, 1900
585 Garrett - Wykoff Lima - Allen - Oct. 25, 1900
586 Mendon - Mendon - Mercer - Oct. 23, 1902
587 Scio - Scio - Harrison - Oct. 29, 1903
588 West Mansfield - West Mansfield - Logan - Oct. 29, 1903
589 Hyde Park - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 20, 1904
590 Amelia - Amelia - Clermont - Oct. 20, 1904
591 Peerless - Crooksville - Perry - Oct. 20, 1904
592 Eureka - Ohio City - Van Wert - Oct. 19, 1905
593 Bradford - Bradford - Darke - Oct. 19, 1905
594 Ostrander - Ostrander - Delaware - Oct. 11, 1906
595 Neoacacia - Columbus - Franklin - Oct. 11, 1906
596 Brookville - Brookville - Montgomery - Oct. 17, 1907
597 Clarington - Clarington - Monroe - Oct. 17, 1907
598 Enoch T. Carson - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 17, 1907
599 Euclid - Cleveland - Coyahoga - Oct. 22, 1908
600 Brenton D. Babcock - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 22, 1908
601 Lakewood - Lakewood - Cuyahoga - Oct. 22, 1908
602 West Lafayette - West Lafayette - Coshocton - Oct. 22, 1908
603 East Gate - Columbus - Franklin - Oct. 21, 1909
604 Cypress - Strasburg - Tuscarawas - Oct. 21, 1909
605 Emmanuel - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 21, 1909
606 W. K. Rickseckcr - Aurora - Portage - Oct. 20, 1910
607 Glouster - Glonster - Athens - Oct. 20, 1910
608 Bremen - Bremen - Fairfield - Oct. 20, 1910
609 Belpre - Beipre - Washington - Oct. 19, 1911
610 Meridian - Cleveland - Cuyahoga - Oct. 19, 1911
611 Henry Perkins - Akron - Summit - Oct. 19, 1911
612 Calumet - Toledo - Lucas - Oct. 19, 1911
613 Barton Smith - Toledo - Lucas - Oct. 24, 1912
614 Winton - Cincinnati - Hamilton - Oct. 24, 1912
615 Youngstown - Youngstown - Mahoning - Oct. 24, 1912
616 Stillwater - Dayton - Montgomery - Oct. 24, 1912
617 Kinsman - Columbus - Franklin - Oct. 24, 1912
620 Sherwood - Defiance - Sherwood U. D.
MILITARY LODGES
WAR OF 1776
American Union Lodge. (See Vol.1, P.80.)
WAR OF 1812
Army Lodge No. 24 U. D., at Camp Meigs,
1813; represented in Grand Lodge session of 1814 and dropped from the
rolls in 1820.
WAR OF 1861-65
Pioneer Military Lodge, members of 4th
Regt., O. V. I. Dispensation, May 15, 1861. Officers, J. Y. Cantwell,
W. M.; James Cantwell, S. W., and John Green, J. W. Made one return
in 1861; Regiment disbanded but Dispensation not returned.
October 3, 1861; petition from members
of 38th Regiment, O. V. I. at Camp Trimble, near Defiance. No fee was
sent and Dispensation not issued.
Benedict Mi1itary Lodge, 55th Regiment,
O. V. I. Dispensation, January 15, 1862. Officers, Geo. H. Safford,
W. M.; Jas. M. Stevens, S. W., and Daniel F. DeWolf, J. W. Paid its
dues and surrendered its Dispensation, October, 1863.
Candy Mili1ary Lodge, 66th Regiment, O.
V. I. Dispensation, January 18, 1862. Officers, A. L. Shepherd, W. M.;
Ross Colwell, S. W., and T. G. Keller, J. W. Aprons and Jewels returned
March 16, 1864, but Dispensation not returned.
Washington Military Lodge, 68th Regiment,
O. V. I. Dispensation, January 27, 1862. Officers, James G. Haley, W.
M.; Robt. K. Scott, S. W., and J. J. Vorhes, J. W. Never made report,
but in 1865, turned over Dispensation to Grand Lodge.
Union Military Lodge, 82nd Regiment, O.
V. I. Dispensation, February 22, 1862. Officers, J. Y. Cantwell, W.
M.; J. A. McClusky, S. W., and J. P. Drennan, J. W. Dispensation returned
in 1865.