Service Lodge No. 1009 Charter Members and Notable Brethren
The charter of Service Lodge No. 1009 marks the beginning of a lodge defined by fellowship, ritual, charity, and service. This directory honors the charter members and notable brethren whose leadership and dedication helped shape the lodge’s history in Queens Freemasonry.
Service Lodge No. 1009: History of a Queens Freemasonry Lodge
Service Lodge No. 1009 played an important role in the history of Queens Freemasonry. Known for charity, ritual work, fellowship, and community involvement, the lodge helped shape Masonic life in Flushing and the First Queens Masonic District.
Masonic Lodge Mergers and Consolidations in Queens: What Happens to Buildings, Records, and Members?
A practical guide to the terms used when one Masonic lodge becomes part of another, including merger, consolidation, dormancy, dissolution, charter surrender, records, buildings, and ceremonies in Queens Masonic history.
Geba Lodge No. 945: Charter Members and Notable Members
Chartered in 1919 in Elmhurst, Queens, Geba Lodge No. 945 emerged during a formative period in New York civic life. This directory preserves the names of its charter members and notable members, highlighting the lodge’s place in the broader history of Masonry in New York.
Geba Lodge: A Queens Room, a New York Story
Chartered in Elmhurst in 1919, Geba Lodge No. 954 was more than a Masonic hall. It was a meeting place for immigrant ambition, civic ritual, neighborhood charity, and an unlikely brotherhood that included David Wechsler, Dudley D. Shoenfeld, Bernard Berkley, and Don Rickles.
City Lodge No. 408: Charter Members and Notable Members
Chartered in Manhattan in 1856, City Lodge No. 408 became part of the long civic and fraternal history of New York. This directory page preserves the names of its charter members and notable members, honoring a lodge whose legacy endured through generations of change.
City Lodge No. 408 The lodge that followed New York
Founded in Manhattan in 1856, City Lodge No. 408 endured war, grief, charity, and migration before becoming Service City Lodge No. 1009 in Queens.
Louis J. Viehmann and the Teepe-Whitney Building in Long Island City
Louis J. Viehmann built his career in the industrial world of Long Island City as a furniture executive, Mason and civic figure. Decades later, the factory tied to his name found an unexpected second life as a communal loft linked to the early history of Talking Heads.
Garret J. Garretson: The Last Great Gentleman of Queens
Garret J. Garretson rose from old Newtown to the New York Supreme Court, building a public life defined by civic duty, judicial integrity, and trust across party lines.
Mizpah Lodge No. 738 Charter Members and Notable Members
A directory honoring the charter members and notable members of Mizpah Lodge No. 738 and their lasting impact on the history of the Lodge and Elmhurst, Queens.