Jack White Saves Detroit Masonic Temple from Foreclosure
Posted: Wed Jun 05, 2013 10:43 pm
by Julian the Apostate
Jack White** has been outed as the anonymous donor who paid the $142,000 in taxes needed by Detroit's Masonic Temple to stave off foreclosure, the Detroit Free Press reports today. The Temple's Cathedral Theater will be renamed the Jack White Theater in the rocker's honor.
Largest Masonic building in the world, not counting the Great Pyramid
The Detroit Masonic Temple is the world's largest Masonic Temple.[1] Located in the Cass Corridor of Detroit, Michigan, at 500 Temple Street, the building serves as a home to various masonic organizations including the York Rite Sovereign College of North America.[2]
saw Puscifer there a couple years back. it would've been a shame to see such a beautiful building fall to ruin as so many nearby already have.
Went with a friend many moons ago to catch Santana at the Masonic Temple (after having seen Santana a few years prior @ Pine Knob and in Phoenix at the old Memorial Coliseum w/Montrose and Eddie 2tix2paradise Money).
Re: Jack White Saves Detroit Masonic Temple from Foreclosure
Posted: Mon Sep 02, 2013 9:59 am
by MinM
At another Masonic Temple about 90 miles west on I-94 from the one in Detroit...
Re: Jack White Saves Detroit Masonic Temple from Foreclosure
Posted: Mon Sep 02, 2013 3:10 pm
by elfismiles
Police break up 'drug-fueled orgy' at Masonic Lodge after finding women dancing naked on stage and men filming sex acts (Video)
By Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED: 21:47 EST, 1 September 2013 | UPDATED: 12:14 EST, 2 September 2013 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... -acts.html
That's poor Edge, feeling lost without his wah-wah, reverb and effects.
Re: Jack White Saves Detroit Masonic Temple from Foreclosure
Posted: Mon Jun 12, 2017 2:21 pm
by PufPuf93
Nice story about Jack White and Masonic Hall and also nice clip about Jack White the guitarist.
The Mason's seem to be a waning organization. Is there a recommended RI thread on the Mason's someone can kick to the top?
I once lived about two miles from the oldest (or one of the oldest) Masonic Lodge in California, Old Shasta Lodge built in 1853. Old Shasta is sort of a ghost town in that it was a small brick city that served the northwestern California gold mines and was the eastern terminus of the trail from the Humboldt county coast to the Central Valley. Old Shasta declined in importance because the railroad was located 6 miles east at Redding. Old Shasta includes an old brick main street maintained as a California State Historical Park. Old Shasta and Weaverville 45 miles west are like the larger gold rush towns of the Sierra Nevada and Jacksonville, OR (visited by robertpaulson) in that they were built of brick and not subject to the repeated burning of other gold rush era settlements built of wood.