Masonic curiosities |
Architecture
This decorated lamppost, with cherub, masonic apron, trowel, and ruler, dates from 1862 when Ulster Hall in Belfast was designed by William J. Barre (1830-1867). |
The mullions of this shopping centre entrance clearly depict the masonic square and compasses. Continental Centre |
João Baroni offers lodging to freemasons and their families while undergoing treatment at the local cancer hospital. A satelite view can be seen at coördinates 20 34 45.51 S, 48 34 34.14 W and further details are available at paragemdeourofino.com.br. Casa do Maçom |
Located in Macon, Georgia, USA, the Masonic Children’s Home of Georgia opened on 14 June 1905. |
Opened in 1932, the International Peace Garden is a 2,300 acre botanical park straddling the U.S. and Canadian border between North Dakota and Manitoba. The Masonic Auditorium was built in 1981, and sponsored by the Grand Lodge of North Dakota and the Grand Lodge of Manitoba. International Peace Garden |
Flagstone depiction of masonic square and compasses on the walkway southeast of Beauchamp Tower in the Tower of London, photographed 2018/02/16. The area was last excavated in 1975 but there are no available records of the installation of these flagstones. |
Brands |
This horse brand was photographed in Seville, Spain and printed in the Winter 2003 issue of Freemasonry Today.
Matador Cattle Company’s Beaverhead Ranch, in Montana, uses a Square and Compass brand. This ranch, owned by Koch Industries of Kansas, is not to be confused with Granville Stuart’s Matador Land and Cattle Company which used a “flying V” brand, or the Matador Land and Cattle Company, started by Texas cattleman, Henry H. (Hank) Campbell in 1878. [Koch Industries photo] |
Cocker Spanials in Finland HIGHTIDE’S FREEMASON s. 5.5.99 spanieliliitto.fi 05.08.2000 JYVÄSKYLÄN YMP. tuom. Risto Janné (8) jaerj. Keski-Suomen Spanielikerho englanninspringerspanieli HIGHTIDE’S FREEMASON spanieliliitto.fi |
Cookie cutter ![]() Square and compasses cookie cutter offered for sale on an internet auction in 2003. www.ebay.com |
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Inns, taverns and public houses |
Freemason’s Hotel appears to be a common name for hotels, at least in Australia. In Britain there are almost three dozen drinking establishments named Masons Arms, Freemason’s Arms, or some variant. (See below)
Battersea, London [c. 1881] 58 Harrington Street Hobart TAS 7000 Australia |
Geography
Near Norfolk International Airport, Virginia, can be found Freemason Street and Freemason Mews.
Freemason Island, a subaerial island with a substrate composed of mollusk shell fragments, is the southernmost of the Chandeleur chain of islands off the shore of St. Bernard County, Louisiana, USA (Lat: 29.79083, long: -88.97417). It was a nesting spot for Reddish Egrets and Louisiana Herons until several freezes starting in 1962 killed off the Black Mangrove thickets. Hurricane Ivan swept the area with a maximum sustained winds of 212 kmph (132 mph) on September 16, 2004, reducing the island to two small islets. |
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Owned by the Grand Lodge of North Dakota, Masonic Island on Lake Metigoshe, North Dakota, has been the site of summertime masonic meetings since 1905. Masonic features of the island include a set of three, five and seven steps leading up from the dock, mortered stone chairs and altar, and a large carved square and compasses. |
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Mason City, Iowa, United States. Main city, seat (1855) of Cerro Gordo county, northern Iowa, U.S., along the Winnebago River, about 120 miles (195 km) north of Des Moines. The area was inhabited by Winnebago and Sioux peoples when Freemasons arrived to settle the site in 1853; its earlier names were Shibboleth, Masonic Grove, and Masonville before the present name was adopted. [ |
Logos and wordmarks
Bart’s Barber Shop occupies the ground floor of the Portland, Oregon lodge hall at 8134 N Denver Ave. Also see “Scissors and razor”. |
The International Association of Machinists logo contained a square and callipers. When they re-formed with the aerospace workers they modified the original logo. |
Founded in 1853, the Junior Order of United American Mechanics was an outgrowth of the Union of Workers, founded in Germantown, Philadelphia in 1845 by a group of nativist working men attempting to stop immigration. Alvin J. Schmidt reported in Fraternal Organizations (Greenwood Press, 1980) that by 1979 the membership was 8,500 social members and about half as many insurance members. In 2010, Lexington Council No. 21 continued to support the American Children’s home in Lexington, NC which they built in 1927. Other than the logo, there appears to be no historic association with Freemasonry. |
While the all-seeing eye of Providence, checkerboard flooring and the clasped hands—seen here on the Fraternal Order of Police emblem—are not exclusively masonic, the three towers formed part of the arms granted to the London Company of Masons in 1472. The use of such terminology as Grand Lodge and Brethren further suggest a masonic connection. |
The Polyteknisk Flyvegruppe is a Danish Flying Club. Their logo appears to be inspired by the square and compasses, or not. |
Repairs101 is a handyman “how-to” Youtube channel focusing on skill building, knot tying, and familiarity with a wide variety of tools designed for different jobs around the home, car, boat or work-site. |
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Square and compasses emblem embossed on a bottle of cooking oil supplied by 4 Oak Oil & Vinegar in Prince George, BC. |
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An industrial and commercial design firm in Kelowna, BC has taken the tools of their trade and arranged them in a fashion reminiscent of the masonic emblem. Whether this was intentional, or just classic design, is unknown. Rambow Mechanical Ltd. [2013] |
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Established in 1997, the Island School of Building Arts has adopted two logos, one seen here, that bear a striking resemblance to the masonic square and compasses emblem. Neither the owner nor the school are known to have any masonic affiliation. Log and Timber School |
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America Created at a Chicago convention on 12 August 12 1881, one of its two organizers, Peter N. McGuire, was a socialist— the union refused to endorse any political party or philosophy although it supported legislation establishing the eight-hour workday. The repressive response to its strike called for 1 May 1886 led to the Haymarket Riot the following day. The Brotherhood admitted both black and white carpenters on an equal footing when it was first formed |
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Monuments
Eilat, Israel |
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Ascunscion, Paraguay |
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Denver, Colorado
USS North Carolina Battleship Memorial |
Music videos
In the video “Its Tricky” by the rap group Run-D.M.C., a woman playing a card game with Penn and Teller is wearing a black 32° Scottish Rite hat. Further examples of masonic references in music can be found at freemasonry.bcy.ca/fiction/music.html. |
Names
What were the top baby names in 2011? |
Online
A self-styled Apple computer ‘fanboy’, Joel Hladecek, posted his Confessions of an Apple Freemason on July 22, 2010, in which he defined an ‘Apple Freemason’ as one who had supported Apple since its earliest days in the 1980s. Why is unclear. |
Philately
The study and collection of masonic themed postage stamps has been the topic of several books, and doesn’t qualify as a curiosity. Anti-masonic stamps are a whole other topic, while stamps celebrating Freemasonry or Freemasons are noted elsewhere on this site. |
Puzzles
Cryptic Crossword (2015) Cryptic Crossword © Gemini Crosswords All Rights Reserved.
Crossword Puzzle (2020) |
Pubs and taverns |
The Freemasons Arms is located on the site of the Freemasons’ Tavern, demolished in 1860. Their sign board displays the coat of arms of the United Grand Lodge of England, whose offices and lodge rooms are now situated 250 yards east in Great Queen Street. The Football Association met here in 1863 to organize the rules of what North Americans call soccer. Freemasons Arms |
The Freemasons Arms, overlooking Hampstead Heath, has also taken the coat of arms of the United Grand Lodge of England. |
The Freemasons Restaurant and the Freemasons Tavern—originally the Freemasons Arms—has not only misappropriated the masonic square and compasses for commercial purposes but their web designer, Nick Coquet, has lifted a key element of their website from the collection of masonic images on this website. |
A sign outside the Square & Compass public house, owned by the same family for a hundred years and noted in all editions of the Good Beer Guide and the CAMRA inventory. The story goes that the name is not derived from Freemasonry, but from the local stonemasons for whom the pub was originally built. |
The Square is older than it looks—behind the brick casing is a timber-framed building. Through most of the 19th century, the licensee was a blacksmith, John Land Wright, followed by his son, Land. No fancy artwork on the walls, just the brass square and compasses on the mantelpiece. The sign out front was recently reworked. |
The Square and Compasses is a public house, believed to date from about 1652. |
Racehorses
At least two horses have been named Freemason. |
Restaurants
The Most Expensive Galician Restaurant. |
Ships
At least two ships have had masonic names. |
The USS Baron DeKalb, a City class ironclad with the Union Navy, is something of a masonic mystery, there being no record of why the civil war vessel would display the masonic square and compasses, although it is know that DeKalb had been a freemason, as was the ship’s fifth and final captain, Lt. Commander (later Admiral) John Grimes Walker. |
Typography
Freemason is a distressed typeface designed in 2003, and posted online without explanation by 21 year old Israeli, Meir Sadan. |
Timepieces
Clocks
Watches |