Island City Lodge No. 586Charter Members and Notable Members
Founded in Hunter’s Point in 1865, Island City Lodge No. 586 grew alongside Long Island City itself, from modest beginnings in borrowed rooms to a lasting place in the civic and Masonic life of Queens. This directory honors the Charter Members who established the Lodge and the Notable Members whose service, leadership, and fidelity helped shape its enduring legacy.
Advance Lodge No. 635: Charter and Founding Brothers
Advance Lodge No. 635 of Astoria, Queens, was named after the USS Advance, the Arctic vessel associated with Dr. Elisha Kent Kane. This directory honors the Lodge’s Charter Members and Notable Members, preserving the history, service, and civic legacy of the men connected to one of Astoria’s enduring Masonic institutions.
Hiram Abiff in Light and Threshold
The Hiram Abiff stained-glass window at the Advance Masonic Temple is framed like a recessed lantern in brick—at night it becomes a local beacon of wisdom, radiance, and thresholded meaning
King Solomon in the Stained Glass of Advance Masonic Temple
To the left of the Advance Masonic Temple, a stained-glass window depicts King Solomon under a daytime sun, turning light into a lasting message of wisdom and clarity.
The Stained Glass Windows of Advance Masonic Temple
The stained glass windows at the front of Advance Masonic Temple present two important figures in Masonic tradition: King Solomon on the left and Hiram Abiff on the right. This introductory article looks at the windows as a pair and links to fuller descriptions of each individual window.
The Skull Above the Door
Above the entrance of Astoria’s Advance Masonic Temple is an ancient symbol with deep architectural meaning: the bucranium, or ox skull. Far from a macabre flourish, it is a classical emblem of sacrifice, consecration, ritual, and permanence.
Egg-and-Dart: The Stone Rhythm Above the Columns
High above the columns of the Advance Masonic Temple in Astoria, Queens, a carved limestone egg-and-dart relief preserves one of classical architecture’s most enduring motifs. More than ornament, it expresses rhythm, order, and the symbolic seriousness of the building itself.
The Lions Above the Columns
Four carved limestone lions crown the columns outside the Advance Masonic Temple in Astoria, Queens. Their presence draws on a long architectural history of guardianship, courage, authority, and ceremonial protection.
A Façade of Guardians: The Entrance to the Advance Masonic Temple
The entrance of Astoria’s Advance Masonic Temple is composed like a ceremonial threshold. Limestone columns and arched masonry create structure; carved stone details transform the façade into a language of strength, order, and consecration—setting up a series on the lions, the egg-and-dart, and the bucranium.
Frederick Skene: The Engineer Who Helped Move New York
Frederick Skene helped build the systems that kept New York moving. An engineer, educator, freemason, and Queens resident, he played a key role in shaping the roads and waterways that carried the state into the modern age.