History of Olympia Lodge No. 1, F. & A. M. 
Olympia, Washington  1852–1935.

George E. Blankenship, Compiler

Olympia, Washington




FOREWORD

It is deemed advisable in compiling a history of Olympia Lodge  No. 1 
to avoid much of the routine business and Masonic work,  which would be 
uninteresting to the reader and of little  historical value.  This work 
has attempted to emphasize the high  lights of local Masonic history 
and connect up as far as may be  possible the lives of our pioneer 
Masons with the history of the  Territory and State of Washington; for 
almost without exception,  those figures prominent in official life and 
those to whom so  much credit is due for the development of our great 
commonwealth  were members of the Fraternity.  Their lives are a 
memory; their  deeds are emblazoned on the journals of Olympia Lodge.


OLYMPIA LODGE U.D., OREGON JURISDICTION

OLYMPIA LODGE No. 5, A.F. & A.M., OREGON JURISDICTION

OLYMPIA LODGE No. 1, F. & A.M., WASHINGTON JURISDICTION

Olympia Lodge No. 1 (formerly No. 5 under the Oregon  jurisdiction) F. 
& A.M., is the oldest organization, secular or  otherwise, in the 
Territory now comprising the State of  Washington.  While the whites 
were contending with the Indians  for supremacy, No. 5 was an active 
organization.  While its  members were clearing the land on which to 
make homes on the  wooded shores of Puget Sound, where future cities 
were to arise,  No. 5 was a virile body.

Before entering into a history of Olympia Lodge No. 1, it will  not be 
amiss to give a brief account of the inception of Masonry  in the 
Northwest.

Looking backward over the history of that county lying between  the 
California border on the south to the British line on the  north and 
from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, we find  that when the 
American emigrants began to predominate, that  inborn desire for law 
and order gave rise to a provisional  government - - a government 
without a flag.  Six years later, in  1849, this was succeeded by a 
territorial government under the  authority of the United States, and 
with the new order sprang up  in the breasts of the sturdy empire 
builders, who had blazed the  trail westward, a yearning for those 
institutions that stood for  a higher and more advanced civilization 
and for religious  influence.  This resulted in the organization of the 
Grand Lodge  of Oregon Free and Accepted Masons, in 1851, the mother of  
Olympia Lodge No. 5 under the Oregon, now No. 1 under the  Washington 
jurisdiction.

The first Masonic Lodge west of the Rocky Mountains was chartered  by 
the Grand Lodge of Missouri, October 10, 1846, which charter  was to 
Multnomah Lodge No. 84 on the charter register of Missouri  and was 
located at Oregon City.  The original jurisdiction of  this Lodge was 
all the territory in the United States west of the  Rocky Mountains.  
The charter came across the plains in a covered  wagon.  It was 
entrusted to two men, who, on the way, were taken  with the gold fever 
and diverted their course toward California,  and entrusted the charter 
to a third party who continued on to  Oregon, reaching there in 1848.  
Four Lodges chartered by the  Grand Lodge of Oregon: Olympia No. 1, 
Steilacoom No. 2, Grand  Mound No. 3, and Washington (Vancouver) No. 4, 
met at Olympia  December 6th, 1858, and organized the Grand Lodge of 
Washington  Territory.

The Grand Lodge of Oregon granted a dispensation on November 25,  1852, 
to sundry brethren at Olympia, Puget Sound, to open a lodge  under the 
name of Olympia, returnable at the communication of the  Grand Lodge 
following that date, which return was promptly made  by the Worshipful 
Master, T.F. McElroy.

The first minute book covering the period from December 11, 1852,  to 
May 13, 1854, ever kept by a Lodge of Masons in this  jurisdiction, 
must always be a memento of great interest to the  Fraternity.  It is a 
small volume of 88 leaves, 7_ X 4_, of white  paper of good quality, 
lined by blue lines, substantially bound  in leather, much of which is 
in the handwriting of T.F. McElroy,  the first Worshipful Master.  It 
is in a good state of  preservation, considering its age of over eighty 
years.  The  minutes show that the practice of a separate ballot in 
each  degree prevailed during the period covered by this book, and  
discloses one instance in which the advancement of an entered  
apprentice - - a brother who was later a prominent member of the  Grand 
Lodge - - was delayed by a single blackball for many years.


The following extract is taken from this minute book:

"Olympia, Oregon Territory, Saturday evening, December 11, A.D. 1852,
A.L. 5852.

T.F. McElroy, J.W. Wiley, M.F. Simmons, N. Delin and Smith Hays  of the 
petitioners with F.A. Clark, Master Mason, member of  Willamette Lodge 
No. 2, and C.H. Hale, member of King David's  Lodge No. 62, under the 
jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Maine,  (Ira Ward and A.K. Skidmore 
of the petitioners being absent)  having duly assembled this evening at 
the town of Olympia,  proceeded to organize a lodge of Ancient Free and 
Accepted Masons  under the authority of a dispensation granted to the 
above  petitioners by the Most Worshipful Berryman Jennings, Grand  
Master of the Grand Lodge of the Territory of Oregon.  The Lodge  was 
opened in due and ancient form in the first, second and third  degrees.  
Bro. T.F. McElroy, Worshipful Master; J.W. Wiley,  senior warden; M.T. 
Simmons, junior warden.  Thereupon the  Worshipful Master appointed N. 
Delin, Treasurer; Ira Ward, senior  deacon; Smith Hays, Tyler.  Bro. 
F.A. Clark, junior deacon pro  tem; Brother C.H. Hale, Secretary pro 
tem.  A committee was  appointed to draft by-laws and the Lodge fixed 
the first and  third Saturdays of each month as regular meeting nights.  
No  further business appearing the Lodge was closed in the first,  
second and third degrees in due and ancient form.

C.H. HALE , Secretary pro tem"


At the second communication a petition for initiation into the  
mysteries of Free Masonry was received from B.F. Yantis.  He was  
initiated Feb. 5, 1853, passed March 5th, and raised April 2nd,  the 
first on whom this honor was bestowed in the territory north  of the 
Columbia River.  Col. B.F. Shaw's initiation followed the  same 
evening.

The charter was granted June 13, 1852, to Olympia Lodge No. 5,  and 
bears date of June 5th, 1853.  The minutes show the first  meeting 
under the charter was held July 2, 1853.  The minute book  shows 
subsequent meetings U.D., but this is due probably to  clerical error.  
The first meetings were held in a two-story  building on what was 
Second Street, on the south side, midway  between Main and Washington, 
in the same block in which the first  legislature met.  On April 15 a 
committee was appointed to report  on the practicability of a building 
for Masonic purposes, and  having resolved to build, at a meeting on 
May 8th, a committee  was appointed to procure a suitable stone or 
block for a corner  stone to be laid on St. John's Day, June 24th, and 
an invitation  was ordered issued to the Grand Lodge of Oregon and the  
Fraternity generally to attend the ceremonies, and to start the  
building a warrant was ordered drawn for $300.00.  The structure  was 
erected on the site of the present Masonic Temple on lots  donated by 
Edmund Sylvester, the founder of the town, and was  razed in 1911.  
Leading contributions to the building were:

T.F. McElroy			$100.00
M.T. Simmons			600.00
E. Sylvester			300.00
C. Etheridge (the builder)	100.00


Permit me here to attempt a pen picture of the old Masonic Hall  and 
its environments.  The little village was located on a narrow  
peninsula, for the east arm of Budd's Inlet then extended to  Union 
Street.  The town lay below what is now Fourth Avenue and  from there 
on to the water.  The new Masonic Hall stood in solemn  grandeur on the 
border of a virgin forest, and along in front ran  a trail, not worthy 
of the name of road, knee-deep in mud in the  winter time.  On either 
side lay dreary wastes of charred stumps  and fallen timber, relieved 
here and there by a one-story frame  house.  The members of Olympia 
Lodge were diligent in attending  meetings, for they had little in the 
way of diversion.  On a dark  winter night these faithful brothers 
might be seen by the light  of the lanterns they carried, carefully 
picking their way over  logs and stumps to the Lodge room, over the 
same ground the  pampered brothers of today travel to this temple in 
automobiles  and who feel themselves deeply aggrieved if they do not 
find  parking place at the front door.   The minutes of an early  
meeting note that an appropriation was made to build a garage (in  
their simplicity they called it a shed), where visiting brothers  from 
the country could park their teams, but the minutes in  primitive style 
state that the shed was merely a place to tie  their horses.

Two sessions of the Legislature were held in the old hall, before  the 
first Capitol building was erected on the hill.  Men who  later were 
destined to occupy prominent places in the future  state received the 
rudiments of their education here.  The door  responded to the call of 
the statesman and the student.

It is the aim in a very brief review of the lives of the pioneer  
members of No. 1 to connect them with the early history of the  
territory.  They founded a fraternity, but they did more, as  empire 
builders, doing their part in gaining the west for the  Union, adding a 
domain to the United States so vast that Atlas  must square his 
shoulders to bear the burden of another world.

To the first Grand Master of Washington, Thornton F. McElroy,  must be 
conceded the honor of being the father of Masonry in  Washington.  Mr. 
McElroy started the first newspaper in this  section, called the 
Columbian, the principal purpose of which was  to advocate the division 
of Oregon and the formation of a new  Territory.  The grand old man of 
Masonry, Thomas Milburne Reed,  was a member of the Constitutional 
Convention and first State  Auditor.  His career as Grand Secretary of 
this jurisdiction was  distinguished by faithfulness to duty and length 
of service.

Six members of No. 1 have served as Grand Master: Thornton F. McElroy, 
the first; James Biles, second and tenth; Selucius  Garfield, third; 
Thomas M. Reed, fifth, sixth, and ninth; Elwood  Evans, eighth; James 
R. Hayden, the seventeenth.

James Biles led a party in covered wagons over the Cascades, and  here 
gave an example of his indomitable courage and  perseverance.  The 
party reached a point where they were stopped  by a sheer drop of 
hundreds of feet.  The stock was starving,  provisions were meagre.  
The party could not turn back, they must  go forward.  There was not 
sufficient rope in the train to reach  the foot of the precipice.  
Biles gave the orders to kill a  steer, but the rawhide so procured was 
insufficient.  Kill  another, was the order.  The wagons were taken 
apart and, by  means of the rawhide strips so procured, the wagons were 
lowered  piece by piece.  The party, men, women, and children, then  
detoured afoot.  The wagons were reassembled and the party  proceeded.  
Of such stuff was the pioneer made.  The traveler of  today feels 
aggrieved if compelled to travel on else but a paved  highway.  Mr. 
Biles settled at Tumwater and started the first  tannery on Puget 
Sound.

Elwood Evans was Secretary of the Territory from 1862 to 1867, a  
lawyer of ability and author of the most comprehensive history  written 
of the Northwest.

Selucius Garfield, who served one term as Grand Master, was  Surveyor 
General of the Territory from 1866 to 1869.  He served  as delegate to 
Congress from 1869 to 1872.  He was a lawyer and a  most eloquent 
orator, whose services were always in demand by the  National 
Committees in presidential years.  He never returned to  the Territory 
after the expiration of his last term.  He was  succeeded in Congress 
by Judge Obadiah B. McFadden, another Mason  of revered memory, and a 
member of the first Grand Lodge,  representing the Vancouver lodge.  He 
was Associate Justice of  the Territorial Supreme Court from 1853 to 
1858.

Noting the Masons who made history in the early days, no one  stands 
out more conspicuously than Michael T. Simmons, first  Junior Warden of 
No. 5.  He led a party that started across the  plains in the spring of 
1845.  Their destination was the  Willamette Valley.  The Oregon 
territory was then No Man's land  with doubtful claims by England and 
the United States settled,  finally, by the preponderance of American 
emigrants.  The  pioneers had formed a provisional government, and made 
a law that  no negro should be allowed to settle in Oregon territory.  
In  Simmon's party was a free mulatto, George Bush.  On learning of  
the discriminating law, Simmons, with commendable loyalty to his  
party, and Bush, said, "We will go on."  They proceeded to tide  water 
and reached Tumwater in the fall of 1845, and called their  little 
settlement New Market, a name soon changed to the present  one.  
Simmons' life here was active politically and Masonically.

The first Mason made by No. 5, B.F. Yantis, served in the first  
legislative Council and subsequent legislatures.  The second,  Col. 
B.F. Shaw, served as colonel of volunteers in the Indian war  in the 
Territory and distinguished himself in the service.

Edmund Sylvester was made a Mason in No. 5 in 1853.  He came to  this 
section with a partner named Smith.  The latter was an  epileptic and 
in a fit fell from a canoe and drowned.  Thus Mr. Sylvester fell heir 
to the joint claims.  The partnership had  laid out a town site and 
named it Smither, [Smithter] later Olympia.  The  surviving partner 
donated twelve acres to the Territory for  Capitol purposes, one block 
to the town for a park and two lots  to Olympia Lodge of Masons, the 
real estate upon which this  building stands.  Mr. Sylvester's original 
residence still stands  across the street to the north from this 
temple.  His place of  business was on old Fourth and Main, where he 
played checkers and  incidentally sold his wares.  Such a devotee was 
he to his  favorite game that should his opponent suggest that there 
was a  customer in the front room he would reply, "Keep very quiet and  
perhaps he will go out."

Courtland Etheridge, known among his friends as Chips, was made a  
Mason in No. 5 in 1853.  He was the designer and builder of the  old 
hall.

Edward S. Solomon was governor of the territory from 1870 to  1872, and 
was Master of No. 1 one term during his residence  here.  He was a 
Polish Jew.  Upon retiring from office, he moved  to San Francisco, 
there practicing law.

Major James Tilton, whose wife presented the lodge with a lock of  
General George Washington's hair, a gift well authenticated, was  the 
first Surveyor General of the territory, from 1853 to 1860.

At a meeting on June 21, 1854, a resolution was passed  recommending to 
the Grand Master that he grant a petition for a  dispensation to 
establish a lodge at Steilacoom.  Steilacoom was  a port on Puget Sound 
which, at that time, was better known than  Tacoma or Seattle.

There is little to distinguish the meetings from 1852 to 1854  beyond 
petitions and ballots, which were distinguished by great  
discrimination in choice of members.  By scanning the minutes the  
discerning reader may notice an ever-increasing list of visitors  from 
other jurisdictions, as the population increased.  Among  these names 
was that of General Geo. B. McClellan, who figured  largely in the 
rebellion later, but who came to the territory  with Governor Stevens' 
engineers, and Jay Butler Anderson, the  first territorial marshal, who 
went east to take up arms with the  Gray and lost his life for a lost 
cause.

A particularly noticeable feature of the proceedings of early  meetings 
is the discipline maintained.  These pioneer Masons were  ritualists as 
far as their limited facilities permitted, but what  was more 
commendable they were sticklers for what the ritual  stood for, and 
frowned with puritanic severity upon hypocrisy.

Those members who stepped beyond the bounds of propriety and  violated 
Masonic teachings were haled before the bar and  disciplined.  A 
notable instance was that of James McAllister, a  member of No. 5, who, 
while hunting cattle, killed two steers  belonging to members of 
Steilacoom Lodge.  Mr. McAllister, on  discovering his mistake, went to 
the owners and offered to make a  settlement, but the owners of the 
cattle were exorbitant in their  demands, whereupon the two Lodges took 
the matter in hand and  forced a settlement.  No lawyers were feed nor 
courts called  upon, but the settlement was effectual.  Cases of 
intemperance  were dealt with patience and firmness, and one member who  
was known to frequent gambling places was hailed for judgment.

His case was set for six months in advance, a probationary period  in 
which to test the sincerity of his promise of reform.  Two  brothers 
who engaged in wordy conflict on the street were reprimanded, and a 
member leaving town without paying his  creditors was expelled.

In later years we have erected magnificent temples in the name of  
Masonry, but they will mock high Heaven if they do not  demonstrate the 
teachings of the Fraternity as exemplified by our  predecessors.  The 
incidents cited above were taken at random  from the minutes to show 
how our antecedents lived their Masonry  and set an example that Masons 
of today may well profit by.

Masonry then meant more than commercial or political advantage  and an 
emblem.  The pioneer had a tear for pity and a hand open  as the day 
for meeting charity, but he was an austere mentor.

May 7, 1859, the Lodge took steps toward building a sidewalk to  
connect with the town, which, when completed, was a boon for the  
juvenile population of the village who utilized it as a coasting  
course, furnishing a good steep grade from the hall to the old  
blockhouse, which stood where is now the marker for the end of  the 
Oregon Trail.

There was much privation endured in those days, in everyday life,  but 
there was some recompense.  There is a notable contrast in  comparison 
with the hold-up methods of today.  No. 1 paid a bill  for $33.78 for 
its Lodge room furniture; $1.12 per yard for its  carpet, and it was a 
good carpet for it endured for years; 6  chairs for $9.00.  These 
chairs were durable, for they are today  in the hands of members of No. 
1, who purchased them when the old  hall was dismantled.  It costs a 
great deal to live in these  effete days of the automobile and 
enervating luxury, but it costs  more to die.  Now when one proposes to 
draw the draperies of his  couch about him and lie down to pleasant 
dreams, he must leave an  estate of at least $1,000.00 for funeral 
expenses or the  obsequies will not be attended by the elect, while in 
1850 to  1860 one could light out for that bourne from whence no 
traveler  returns for about $36.00, as the record shows, and make a 
pretty  good appearance at that.  The necessary offices were performed 
by  surviving brothers without price, and the deceased was taken out  
south of town in a dead-ex wagon rather than a gasoline hearse,  but no 
one of the deceased was ever heard to complain about his  conveyance.

One of the first funerals at which Olympia Lodge presided was one  
somewhat historic in the annals of the territory.  The services  were 
held over the remains of A. Benton Moses, of Steilacoom  Lodge, and 
Joseph Miles.  Moses and Miles had been shot from  ambush by the 
Indians near Connell prairie, while in company with  a small body of 
volunteers who were going to join the main body.

These Indians were instigated in the murder by Chief Leschi, who  was 
tried for the crime and eventually hung.  Leschi was a fit  subject for 
the hangman's noose then.  Today, thanks to Ezra  Meeker, he is a hero 
and a martyr.

There was a tragedy in the funeral.  The bodies were placed in  one of 
the two wagons in the little settlement.  In the other  rode the bride 
of six months of Mr. Moses.  The day was dark and  dreary and the road 
almost impassible.  To do honor to the men  who had given up their 
lives to protect others, the citizens  demanded a military funeral, 
and, as such, music was  indispensable.  The band consisted of a fife 
and drum.  As the  procession wended its way to the graveyard on the 
road leading to  what is now Little Rock, near Belmore, over and over 
again the  band played the strains of the "Girl I Left Behind Me."  
This may  have a ludicrous aspect now, but it was agony for a girl who 
was  following a young husband to his last resting place.  The people  
were simply doing the best they could to honor these Masons with  the 
limited means at their command.

But the old order gives way for the new.  Olympia Lodge is now a  
flourishing organization of over four hundred members, holding  the 
proud title of No. 1 in a great jurisdiction.  Harmony Lodge  No. 18 
was organized in 1871 and is a prosperous body of about  one hundred 
sixty-five members.  The necessities of these Lodges  and the higher 
bodies demanded a better and a more commodious  home and the old gave 
way for the building now occupied.  Much  credit is due to a committee 
composed of Frank Blakeslee, Chas. E. Claypool, and Robert Doragh, to 
whom was delegated the  authority for financing and supervising the 
building.  The corner  stone for this temple was laid in 1911.

In such reverence was the old building held that many were loathe  to 
have it destroyed.  In the hope of preserving it, the Grand  Lodge of 
Washington was offered a deed to the hall and the ground  upon which it 
stood for use as a headquarters for the Grand Lodge  archives and 
office of the Grand Secretary.  But Tacoma influence  was too strong, 
and brought about a removal of the office of  Grand Secretary to the 
City of Destiny, after having been  maintained here since the 
organization of the Grand Lodge.  Much  of this time Thomas Milburne 
Reed was Grand Secretary, a man who  lived his Masonry and died a 
sincere and consistent Christian.  His memory is cherished by all who 
were fortunate in having his  acquaintance and friendship.

In such deep veneration was the old hall held that there were  those in 
the membership of No. 1 that fought to the bitter end to  save the old 
edifice.  At last, the sentimental members offered  to consent to the 
desecration on condition that a small lodge  room would be included in 
the new building which would be a  replica of the old Lodge room with 
its arch ceiling and starry  embellishments.  And the historic old 
building was razed, and an  old door, the main entrance, was thrown 
into an abandoned barn  and forgotten.  The old order became a memory, 
with nothing to  connect with the beginning of things except an old 
minute book  and charter.

By merest accident, the old door was found and rejuvenated, and  upon 
its surface on each panel is emblazoned the high lights of  northwest 
Masonic history.  The old door was home again and hung  in the old 
Lodge room, and its return was celebrated by a special  session of No. 
1, when it was installed.  The old hand rail was  found that had guided 
the Masons of old up the stairs.  It was  made of a hard, not a native, 
wood, brought from an eastern  state.  When the old building was razed, 
a thorough search failed  to reveal the old corner stone laid in 1854.

The door has been assigned a position in the smaller Lodge room,  which 
in most respects is the one which it guarded, near the  senior warden's 
station in the west.  It was the only place in  the temple where wall 
space sufficient for its size could be  found.  There it will remain 
and as the years go by, additional  history will be written upon its 
panels and stiles and thus  through the generations will preserve, 
unimpaired, the history of  the first Lodge in the state.

The original place of meeting of Olympia No. 5, was on Second  Street, 
between Main Street (now Capitol Way) and Washington  Street, in a two-
story wooden building with an outside stairway.

This was also the building in which was organized the Grand Lodge  of 
Washington.  The site is now marked by a plaque on which is  inscribed:

"Original Meeting Place  Olympia Lodge NO. 1, F. & A.M.
 DEC. 11, 1852  Laid by the M.W.
 Grand Lodge F. & A.M. of Washington  Dec. 10, A.L. 5927
Robert A. Wilson  Grand Master"

This location is a memorable one in the history of the state.  In  this 
block was held the first session of the territorial  legislature in 
1854.  This site is also marked by a plaque  installed by the Pioneer 
Society of the State.  Here also stood  an old hotel in which was held 
the official reception of Governor  Isaac I. Stevens on his arrival in 
Olympia.  The governor was  accompanied by a party of engineers sent 
out by the government to  locate a feasible route for a 
transcontinental railroad.  They  established their office in the block 
opposite.  In fact, all of  the little village of Olympia, made the 
capitol, by proclamation  of Governor Stevens, of a vast domain 
extending from the Rocky  Mountains to the Pacific Ocean and from the 
Columbia River to the  British line, was located well down toward the 
waterfront, but  the Masons built their first Lodge hall six blocks 
above, well  surrounded by timber.

Members in good standing enrolled during 1853 and 1854 were: T.F.  
McElroy, J.W. Wiley, M.T. Simmons, N. Delin, Ira Ward, C.H. Hale,  
Smith Hays, F.A. Clark, I.B. Powers, B.F. Yantis, B.F. Shaw, J.R. 
Johnson, John M. Hayden, Edmund Sylvester, Courtland Etheridge,  Levi 
M. Ford, T.W. Glasgow.

These were indeed the pioneer Masons of No. 1 that participated  in the 
laying of the corner stone of the old building June 24,  1854.  At 11 
o'clock on that day a procession was formed and  proceeded to the site 
of the new Lodge building, at which time  and place the corner stone 
was laid with appropriate ceremonies,  after which the procession moved 
to Brother Cock's hall at the  Pacific house, as stated by the minutes, 
and listened to an  eloquent address by J.P. Anderson on Masonry.  
Evidently the  pioneer had the same weakness as the more modern Mason, 
for the  minutes further state that the brethren partook of a sumptuous  
entertainment prepared by Brother Cock for the occasion.  The  Pacific 
house, referred to, stood on the now vacant lot opposite  the city 
hall.  Brother Cock was later suspended for  insubordination and 
finally expelled by order of the Grand Lodge.

At a meeting on August 4, a proposition to reduce the fees for  the 
three degrees to $30.00 was discussed and rejected, the fees  remaining 
at $50.00

The approaching Indian war had commenced, making inroads on the  
members of the Masonic Fraternity.  As already stated, A. Benton  Moses 
had been accorded a Masonic funeral by No. 5, and at the  meeting held 
November 3, 1855, resolutions were passed deploring  the death of A.J. 
Bolon.  He was an Indian agent and was  proceeding toward The Dalles 
accompanied by three Indians.  One  of the Indians on the trail dropped 
behind Bolon and shot him in  the back.  With the help of his 
companions, the murderer then cut  Bolon's throat, killed his horse, 
built a fire and burned the  bodies of horse and man.  This murderer 
was duly punished.  His  name was Kwalchen.  One day he rode into 
Colonel Wright's camp.  The Colonel made this report of the affair, "He 
rode into my camp  at 9 o'clock this morning and at 9:15 he was hung."

At the meeting held November 11, 1855, resolutions of regret were  
adopted on the death of Brother James McAllister, killed by the  
Indians in White River Valley.  His body was found two days after  the 
killing of Moses, before mentioned, shockingly mutilated.

It may be stated in passing that the pioneer Masons spared  neither 
space nor effort in expressing their sympathy.  The  resolutions 
commemorating the death of McAllister covered two  pages of the minute 
book, closely written, closing with the  following: "Resolved that a 
blank page be left in the record book  of the Lodge and the name of our 
deceased brother be inscribed in  the center thereof, with marginal 
black lines."  The secretary  left two blank pages in the record book, 
but to this day they  remain blank.

On December 8, 1855, a communication was read from Steilacoom  Lodge 
announcing the death of Lieutenant Slaughter.  He was  killed by the 
Indians near White River.  He had been a visitor to  Olympia No. 5, 
though a member in Steilacoom, and Olympia was  asked to participate in 
the funeral ceremonies.  Lieutenant  Slaughter was a West Point 
graduate and assigned to the 4th  Infantry, to which Lieutenant Grant 
(later General Grant) was  assigned.  He was ordered to the West and 
was seasick every day  of his trip here.  On his arrival here he was 
ordered to return  East, on account of a mistake in his assignment.  
Again he  suffered from seasickness and, when Grant found him in Panama 
in  1852, still sick, he told his superior that he wished he had  
joined the Navy, for then he probably would not have to go to sea  so 
much.

Closely interwoven with the early history of Washington is that  of 
Masonry, for the outstanding characters that were bearing the  burdens 
of pioneer life and carrying on contests with the Indians  were Masons.

At a meeting on February 7, 1857, a resolution was passed urging  the 
granting of a petition for the establishment of a Lodge of  Masons at 
Grand Mound.  The petitioners were: Charles Byles,  James Byles, I. 
Axtell, W.B.D. Newman, C.E. Baker, B.C. Armstrong, Aaron Webster, B.F. 
Yantis, and R.S. Doyle.  The  petition was granted, and the Lodge 
survived for a few years.

The meeting of September 19, 1857, was notable for several  
distinguishing features.  Among the visitors notes was Fayette  
McMullen of Catlett Lodge No 35, Virginia.  This gentleman was  the 
second governor of the territory.  Selucius Garfield and W.W. Miller 
were balloted on and elected.  Garfield was later to  represent the 
territory in congress, and W.W. Miller was Adjutant  General during the 
troublous Indian war times.

Thomas M. Reed, of Acacia Lodge No. 92, appeared as a visitor on  
January 16, 1858.  This brother was destined to be a very  prominent 
figure in future Masonic history.  He affiliated here  on June 5, 1858.

The first move toward selection of a Masonic cemetery was made on  
March 6, 1858, when a committee reported progress on the matter.  The 
Lodge later accepted the donation of a tract of land made by  Smith 
Hays, stipulating that the land was a donation on  consideration of the 
Lodge's clearing and cultivating the three  acres given.  On September 
4, 1858, a contract was approved for  clearing the cemetery ground.

At the same meeting was held the trial of a brother for making an  
assault on a brother Mason with intent to do bodily harm; he was  found 
guilty and promptly expelled.

At this particular period in the history of No. 5, it is quite  
apparent that sinister motives actuated certain members in their  
ballots on petitioners.  There was good material rejected without  
apparent cause - - men of good reputation who had borne their  parts in 
the struggle against the Indians and were in every way  good citizens, 
whose exclusion from the Fraternity reflected  little credit on the 
guilty ones.  As an evidence, Elwood Evans  was rejected twice before 
admission, but was finally received and  became Grand Master.

One examining the old records in the '50s is impressed with he  
beautiful handwriting and neatness apparent in keeping the  minutes.  
There were no typewriters then, and penmanship was an  art.

Some time previous to 1860, J.W. Wiley, who was a charter member  of 
No. 5, was indefinitely suspended for unmasonic conduct.  On  his 
death, at a meeting held March 30, 1860, the question of the  propriety 
of permitting his remains to be interred in the Masonic  cemetery was 
taken up and generally discussed.  Finally  permission was granted for 
such burial.

At the meeting, December 2, 1860, a committee was appointed to  
ascertain the cost of neat and uniform regalia for use of the  members 
and additional supply for use of the visitors, but no  action was 
taken, though the Tyler was authorized to keep a  register and require 
all members and visitors to register.

In 1861 William Lyle was junior warden.  At a meeting of the  Grand 
Lodge held in September of that year, Mr. Lyle was expelled  for 
unmasonic conduct and Olympia Lodge was so officially  informed.

It behooved Masons to conduct themselves circumspectly in those  days 
for the proceedings as recorded are replete with charges and  trials, 
and little consideration was accorded the guilty.  One  member was 
severely disciplined for stating that a special  meeting had been held 
by No. 1 with a view to taking action to  influence the decision of a 
court in a case then being tried.

In June of 1864, a special communication was held to act upon the  
application of a parent for permission to bury his deceased child  in 
the Masonic cemetery, which permission could not be granted  without 
consent of the Lodge.  The result was that the southeast  corner of the 
cemetery was set aside for sepulture of strangers  under certain 
restrictions.  The cemetery committee was  authorized to sell lots 
20x20 feet at $20.00 per lot and to sell  smaller lots at such price as 
they saw fit.

June 18, 1866, the Lodge passed resolutions of respect to the  memory 
of Smith Hayes, whose death occurred in Kansas.  Brother  Hayes was 
Tyler at the meeting for the organization of No. 5.

At a regular meeting on March 18, 1867, resolutions protesting  the 
action of Grand Mound Lodge No. 3, meeting at Tumwater, in  conferring 
the Entered Apprentice degree upon N.S. Porter.  Inasmuch as N.S. 
Porter had been already rejected by Olympia  Lodge, they declared the 
action of Grand Mound Lodge as irregular  and clandestine, and 
earnestly protested the advancement of  Porter.

At a special communication held November 15, 1867, the Lodge  passed 
resolutions of respect to the memory of M.J. Simmons, who  died at this 
time in Lewis County.  The Lodge also ordered paid  bills as follows on 
account of Brother Simmons: For covering and  trimming coffin, $13.12; 
for teams to cemetery, $12.50.  One  could afford to die then.

At the regular communication held August 3, 1868, Olympia Lodge  
rescinded the resolutions formerly passed censuring Grand Mound  Lodge 
for conferring the Entered Apprentice degree upon N.S. Porter, and 
expressed a wish for amicable relations.  A  communication was received 
from Grand Mound Lodge asking Olympia  Lodge to confer the Fellow Craft 
degree upon Brother Porter. This request was not complied with.

Grand Mound Lodge surrendered its charter September 19, 1868.  As  will 
be remembered, Olympia Lodge had by resolution declared the  initiation 
of N.S. Porter by Grand Mound Lodge at Tumwater as  irregular and 
clandestine, and such action was an infringement of  the jurisdiction 
of Olympia Lodge.  September 20, 1879, Olympia  Lodge gave permission 
to Harmony Lodge to confer the Fellow Craft  and Master Mason degrees 
upon Brother Porter, inasmuch as Porter,  by surrender of charter by 
Grand Mound Lodge, had fallen under  the jurisdiction of No. 1.

At the meeting of August 3, 1868, above referred to, a verbal  request 
was made for a new lodge in the town of Olympia, which lodge would have 
joint jurisdiction with Olympia Lodge No. 1.  The names of the brethren 
making such request were: J.L. Myers,  F.M. Sargeant [Sargent], C.H. 
Hale, L.G. Abbott, E.L. Smith, N. Crosby, and  J.H. Munson.  The Lodge 
refused to recommend such action.  At a  later meeting this same 
request was renewed.  Much discussion  ensued and the request was 
refused by a decisive vote.

On February 28, 1870, resolutions of condolence were passed on  the 
death of Marshall F. Moore.  Brother Moore had served a term  as 
Governor of Washington Territory.  A Masonic funeral was  largely 
attended.

On February 4, 1871, the Lodge settled the vexed question of  granting 
permission for a dispensation for a new Lodge in Olympia  by a vote of 
20 favoring and 18 against.  Leave was granted for  the new Lodge to 
meet in Olympia Lodge room at a rental of $15.00  per month.  Necessary 
repairs to the building and rearranging  same was ordered at a cost of 
$893.70, the lower floor being used  at the time for church purposes on 
Sunday.

At a special communication held on October 7, 1872, resolutions  of 
respect to the memory of Brother I.B. Thomas of Winfield Lodge  No 581, 
New York, were adopted.  Brother Thomas' death occurred  in Olympia, in 
which connection occurs an interesting episode in  local history.  The 
Northern Pacific Railroad was working  westward, and great interest was 
manifested regarding the  location of the Puget Sound terminus.  
Olympia had been promised  it on credited authority.  The following 
statement may serve to  throw some light on the inside history of the 
location of the  terminus of the first transcontinental line to reach 
the  Northwest:

"Included in the directorate of the Northern Pacific Railroad  Company 
were men who composed the Lake Superior and Puget Sound  Land Company. 
They were sufficiently strong in the railroad  company to dictate its 
policy.  The railroad company was not  interested in town sites; the 
land company - - so they had sent a  man west to secure title to lands 
at the prospective terminus.   That man was Ira Bradley Thomas, before 
mentioned.  After having  secured title to large tracts on Budd's 
Inlet, he died.  Thus,  considering the time that would be consumed in 
probating the  estate of Mr. Thomas, with the law's delays, this land 
was  withdrawn from the market indefinitely.  Time was all in all.  The 
result that in order to realize their financial expectations,  the Lake 
Superior & Puget Sound Land Company secured lands a few  miles from Old 
Tacoma, and went into the Northern Pacific  directorate and located the 
terminus of the Northern Pacific  Railroad."

This story was current at that time, and I give it for what it is  
worth.

In 1872 Olympia was visited by the severest earthquake shock  
experienced here.  It occurred on a meeting night, and the Lodge  was 
conferring the third degree upon Ben Turner.  Ben was typical  of the 
early day logger.  He was very profane, and anyone hearing  Ben swear 
realized that while he, himself, might know the words,  he failed 
miserably on the tune, for Ben swore by note.  When the  shock came, 
Ben was on his knees at the altar, and it might be  stated 
parenthetically, that is was the only time that Ben was  ever known to 
be on his knees.  The shock was so severe that many  in the hall 
thought discretion was the better part of valor and  sought refuge 
outside.  But, like Casabianca, Ben knelt, whence  all but him had 
fled.  The excitement over, the members returned,  and on conclusion of 
the ceremonies asked the candidate if he was  alarmed and why he did 
not fly.  Mr. Turner, surprised, said he  noticed a trembly sensation, 
but he came looking for Hell and was  prepared for it.  But for all his 
profanity, Ben was an honest  man and did no discredit to the 
Fraternity.

On November 1, 1873, the Lodge sold three acres of its cemetery  tract 
for Jewish cemetery purposes, for the sum of $50.00, and  also leased 
the ground floor of the hall to the Grand Lodge for  an office for the 
Grand Secretary.

A spirit of harmony now seemed to prevail for Olympia Lodge  appointed 
a committee to act jointly with a committee from  Harmony Lodge to 
raise necessary funds for a banquet and ball,  each agreeing to stand 
half of any possible deficiency.  The  event was to be held in the old 
town hall.

It was not until 1874 that the Lodge decided on improving the lot  on 
which the hall stood.  On December 9, they appropriated $200  for such 
improvement and built a privy, and for this purpose  authorized the 
engagement of a specialist.

On June 5, the secretary called attention of the Lodge to the  proposed 
reunion of the Grand Lodges of Oregon, Washington, and  Idaho, as well 
as subordinate Lodges in the several  jurisdictions, to be held on the 
16th day of August in Olympia.   The Lodge appropriated $100 for 
entertainment, and the event  proved a memorable one.

On June 25, 1875, the death of Judge O.B. McFadden was  announced.  
Brother McFadden had been a prominent figure in the  history of the 
territory.

On January 25, 1876, the Lodge attended the funeral of W.W. Miller, who 
had also been a prominent figure in local history.

Improvement of the Lodge property was undertaken to the extent of  
building a picket fence along the front and grading the lot, for  which 
$25 was paid, and permission was given for divine service  on the 
ground floor.

A petition for a new Lodge at Chehalis and asking for  recommendation 
from No. 1 was made February 16, 1878, which was  granted.

At this time maple trees were planted about the hall lot, which  
survived until the march of improvement called for their  destruction.

By way of comparison, it is well to consider the cost of dying.  At 
this time, the Lodge paid a bill of $51.00, which included a  steamer 
to and from Tacoma for conveyance of visiting brothers.

On February 8, 1879, occurred the death of Judge B.F. Yantis, the  
first Mason made by Olympia Lodge No. 1, U.D., Oregon  jurisdiction.  
Brother Yantis, as a delegate from Grand Mound  Lodge, participated in 
the convention to form the Most Worshipful  Grand Lodge of Washington, 
becoming its first Senior Grand  Deacon.

The minutes of meetings in all these years recorded are replete  with 
bills paid for charity.

The proceedings of meetings during the period covering 1880 to  1884 
are not distinguished by important events, the Lodge  devoting itself 
to routine business and work, though the  membership during this time 
was considerably augmented.

On February 8, 1884, Olympia recommended the application for  charter 
for a lodge at Montesano to be known as Wynooche Lodge,  with Brother 
D.H. Mullen as Worshipful Master.

During this time, the following appears upon the minute book:  "There 
were no meetings during the month of June.  Reason: no  quorum first 
Saturday evening, and last Saturday evening, neither  the Master or 
Wardens were in town.  I make this note deeming it  necessary so all 
brethren may understand.  N. Crosby, Secretary."

The death of Thornton F. McElroy occurred February 4, 1885.  His  death 
was sudden, and Harmony Lodge No. 18 joined with Olympia  Lodge in the 
Masonic funeral.  Brother McElroy served as the  first Worshipful 
Master of Olympia No. 5, U.D., under the Oregon  jurisdiction and 
several subsequent terms, also as first Grand  Master of the Grand 
Lodge of Washington.

Olympia Lodge, on August 1, 1885, approved a petition presented  by 
Masons of South Bend for a charter for a Lodge to be known as  Gavel 
Lodge.

The death of Brother Nathaniel Crosby occurred on December 18,  1885, 
and he was accorded a Masonic funeral.  Brother Crosby had  been the 
efficient secretary of the Lodge for several terms.

Harmony Lodge No. 18 and Olympia Lodge No. 1 held their first  joint 
installation on December 28, 1885.  The officers were  installed by 
Past Grand Master T.M. Reed, R.G. O'Brien acting as  Marshal.

Edmund Sylvester died in Seattle September 20, 1887.  Brother  
Sylvester was made a Master Mason by Olympia Lodge U.D., in June  1853.  
Edmund Sylvester was closely identified with the history  of Olympia 
from its beginning.  He came to Puget Sound in 1846  and located on 
what is now known as Chambers Prairie.  Sylvester  had a partner named 
Smith, who located for his claim the half  section where Olympia now 
stands.  Brother Sylvester ran the  first hotel the little village of 
Olympia boasted, a two-room  building, 16x24, cloth-lined, with bunks 
for the accommodation of  guests who possessed their own blankets.  
Brother Sylvester was  not without a sense of humor, for he advertised 
in the modest  little local paper that he had "imported a celebrated 
chef direct  from Hongkong."     It was in 1887 that the first and 
third Fridays of each month  were adopted as dates for stated 
communications.

James Byles died February 5, 1888.  He was the second and tenth  Grand 
Master of the Grand Lodge of Washington.  He was held in  high regard 
by the brethren and his fellow citizens generally,  and was accorded a 
Masonic funeral, Harmony No. 18 participating.

At a meeting March 7, 1890, T.M. Reed, R.G. O'Brien, and R. Frost, as a 
committee, were appointed to confer with a like  committee from Harmony 
Lodge regarding the building of a new  temple.  At a meeting in 
September of the same year, the Lodge  resolved that Olympia Lodge take 
such steps toward the erection  of a Masonic temple as may seem best to 
the Lodge.  Further, that  the Lodge will convey to a Masonic temple 
building association,  for the purpose of erecting a temple on the lots 
on the northwest  corner of Eighth and Main Streets, in the city of 
Olympia, and  receive the price therefor in paid-up stock of such 
association  and as a further consideration that a Lodge room, free 
from rent,  be granted to Olympia No. 1, but twenty-one years were to  
intervene before a new temple was actually erected.

In September, 1891, the Lodge began to consider the advisability  of 
lighting the hall with electricity, and gave a committee,  already 
appointed, further time to report.  On October 6, 1891,  the Lodge paid 
a bill for wiring the hall, and the primitive  method of lighting was 
then abandoned.

In 1894, movement was made toward securing the permanent location  of 
the Grand Lodge at Olympia, but was not successful.

The death of Francis Tarbell occurred on December 20, 1894.  Brother 
Tarbell had served as territorial treasurer from 1875 to  1880.

The Lodge appointed a committee consisting of Henry Sabin, Arthur  
Ellis, S.P. Winan, G. Kaufman, J.C. Rathburn, [Rathbun] L.G. Abbott, 
Jno. F. Gowey, Wm. McMicken, R.G. O'Brien, Robert Frost, F.G. Deming,  
and A.B. Cowles, to have charge of the entertainment of the Grand  
Lodge, which held its 1895 session in Olympia.

In September, 1896, the death of George D. Shannon was announced,  and 
a Masonic funeral was accorded him in which all Masonic  bodies were 
invited to participate.  Brother Shannon had long  been identified with 
the affairs of the territory and state, as a  trustee of the Western 
Washington Hospital for the insane and as  a State Land Commissioner.

The period of financial stringency in the '90s made itself  apparent in 
the affairs of the Lodge, and many applications were  made for leniency 
in the matter of dues.  All meritorious appeals  were met with great 
readiness.

Representatives of Tenino Lodge F. & A.M. at this time appeared  before 
Olympia Lodge and solicited this Lodge to take stock in  the Masonic 
Building & Real Estate Association of Tenino, the  object of which was 
to purchase the hall in which the Tenino  Lodge then met.  Olympia 
responded in a moderate way, to the  extent of seven shares.

March 3, 1898, the death of Elwood Evans was reported, which  occurred 
in Tacoma, to which city he moved from Olympia.  Brother  Evans had 
lived a long and distinguished career in civic as well  as Masonic 
affairs.  He represented the territory at the  Centennial Exposition at 
Philadelphia.  He practiced law in  Olympia for a number of years, and 
was the eighth Grand Master of  the State of Washington.

In May of this same year occurred the death of Benjamin Harned.
 Brother Harned held the office of Territorial Treasurer from 1867  to 
1870 and was for many years treasurer of the Grand Lodge of  
Washington.  In such high regard was he held that a number of  
appealing addresses were made in Lodge on the announcement of his  
death.  He held the office of Grand Treasurer at the time of his  
death.

Brother A.D. Glover's death was reported on August 5, 1898, when  it 
occurred at the Odd Fellows' Home in Walla Walla.  Brother  Glover 
served one term as Postmaster of Olympia.

On March 3, 1899, a petition for membership by affiliation was  
received from Brother E.M. McClintie, with demit from Chehalis  Lodge.  
Brother McClintie has proved himself a useful  acquisition, as he has 
served No. 1 as Master for five terms.

The month of March, 1899, was marked by the death of Brother J.C. Horr, 
who was accorded a Masonic funeral.  Brother Horr served in  the State 
Senate from Thurston County, and also as Mayor of  Olympia.

On May 17, 1899, the Lodge participated in the last sad rites for  
Brother Courtland Ethridge, who built the old Masonic Hall - -  the 
first Masonic Hall erected on the Pacific Coast north of the  Columbia 
River.  He was made a Mason in the early days of the  Lodge.  Jacob 
Waldrip, a few days later, was consigned to a  resting place in the 
Masonic cemetery.

The death of William McMicken occurred in September, 1899.  Brother 
McMicken served as United States Surveyor General from  1873 to 1886 
and as Territorial Treasurer from 1886 to 1888.  He  held the office of 
Grand Treasurer at the time of his death.  As  a man he was highly 
respected as a best type of citizen and a man  who had lived his 
Masonry.

December 14, 1899, the typewriter is made apparent for the first  time 
in the journal of the Lodge, and the minutes so recorded  were the 
proceedings of the Lodge commemorating the centennial of  the death of 
our illustrious brother, George Washington.  Worshipful Master D.E. 
Bailey announced the object of the  assemblage, rendered more 
interesting by the exhibition of a  locket containing a lock of hair of 
Washington, presented to  Olympia Lodge by Mrs. James Tilton - - a lock 
taken from the head  of the General shortly after the battle of 
Brandywine.  Reverend  A.G. Sawin delivered the invocation, followed by 
an address on  Washington, his public service and character; 
Washington's  Masonic history by N.S. Porter; the Influence of Masonry 
on the  Founding of the American Republic, by Frank J. Browne, at the  
close of which, being about the time that Washington expired, the  
Lodge members were called to their feet and a beautiful anthem  was 
sung by a quartet.  The exercises closed by the reading of  
Washington's Farewell Address, by Will D. Jenkins.

During the period covered by the minutes in the '80s, the Lodge  seemed 
considerably disturbed over the matter of lighting the  hall.  
Acetylene lighting was investigated by a committee, return  to the old 
coal oil lamp was discussed, but the Lodge during this  time appears to 
have adhered to the electric method first  discovered by our 
illustrious brother, Benjamin Franklin.

A circular letter was read from Rosalia Lodge No. 84 of this  
jurisdiction, urging the establishment of a Masonic home.  The  
secretary was directed to notify Rosalia Lodge that our  delegation to 
the Grand Lodge would be instructed to favor the  same.

The Lodge donated a block of land in the Masonic cemetery for the  
burial of the unclaimed dead of the first Washington regiment in  the 
Spanish-American War.  Governor Rogers, pleased with the  generosity of 
the Lodge, visited the cemetery and made selection  of a suitable 
location.

The Lodge was convened on May 20, 1900, for the purpose of  attending 
the funeral of Brother John F. Gowey.  Brother Gowey  had been 
prominently identified with the development of Olympia  and was later 
appointed as United States Counsel to Japan, and,  while in the 
exercise of his duties there, he died, his remains  being returned to 
his old home for burial.

The Worshipful Master of Olympia Lodge, as one of its  representatives 
to the Grand Lodge, reported that he had pledged  his Lodge for $100 
toward the building of a Masonic home for the  aged and infirm.

On December 21, 1901, the Lodge passed resolutions of respect to  the 
memory or David E. Bailey, a Past Master of this Lodge.

The same date, the Lodge appointed a committee to attend the  funeral 
of Governor John R. Rogers, whose interment occurred at  Puyallup.

November 7, 1902, Grand Master Arthur issued a circular calling  upon 
the brethren to attend the meeting at Olympia, commemorating  the 
fiftieth anniversary of the organization of this Lodge.  He  said:     
"On December 11, 1852, when our brethren assembled at the head of  
Puget Sound and organized that Lodge, the territory of Washington  was 
not yet formed; there was no Masonic Lodge north of the  Columbia River 
west of the Rocky Mountains; none on the east  nearer than Minnesota, 
nor on the west nearer than China.  These  pioneers of Masonry planted 
in the unconscious Capitol City of an  unborn state, a branch of the 
great universal Brotherhood of  Masonry."     The record then shows 
that Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of  Washington opened on the third 
degree in ample form at 11:00  a.m., December 11, on special 
communication for the purpose of  celebrating the semi-centennial 
anniversary of Olympia Lodge No. 1.

Ira Ward, a pioneer at Tumwater, and one of the petitioners for  
charter for a Masonic Lodge under the jurisdiction of Oregon,  which 
became No. 5, died in February, 1903, at the advanced age of 87 years, 
and was accorded Masonic service.

Resolutions deploring the death of Brother Robert Bennett Morrell  were 
passed at the May meeting in 1903.  Brother Morrell was  murdered while 
in the discharge of his duty as deputy sheriff of  Thurston County.  He 
was killed by a prisoner in his custody.

The minutes of May 15, 1903, state that a communication from the  
Masonic Temple Association inviting this Lodge to attend the  
ceremonies of the laying of the corner stone of the Masonic  Temple on 
May 22 by the Grand Master, assisted by Brother  Theodore Roosevelt, 
President of the United States, but fail to  state where the corner 
stone was laid.

Louis Bettman, long a member of No. 1, died May 24, 1904.  Brother 
Bettman was a pioneer merchant of Olympia, and was highly  respected as 
a man and a Mason.  Late in life he was afflicted  with locomotor 
ataxia, but his infirmity did not diminish his  loyalty to the Masonry 
to which he was so devotedly attached, and  in order that he might 
attend meetings a rope was attached to the  stairway by which means he 
was enabled to reach the lodge room.

The Lodge celebrated the semi-centennial anniversary of the  laying of 
the corner stone of the Masonic Hall, which occurred  June 24, 1854.  
Fitting addresses were made, one by a member who  was present on the 
occasion fifty years ago.

The Olympia Hotel burned on the night of November 6, 1904.  This  
building was located on the present site of the post office.  It  was a 
very large wooden building and its burning greatly  endangered the old 
Masonic Hall.  Heroic efforts were made to  save the old building for 
it had an historic record that was dear  to Masons and profanes alike.  
They were successful in saving the  old structure, but it bore the 
marks of severe scorching.  Thanks  for its preservation were extended 
to J.K.L. Mitchell, Milton  Gates, G.S. Prince, Robert Frost, Alex 
Wright, Alex Lang, Charles  Burr, and W.M. Nunn.  The loss to the 
insurers was reported at  $40.00 A heavy rain assisted the fire 
fighters.

October 7, 1905, at low twelve, our esteemed brother, Thomas  Milburne 
Reed, Grand Secretary, passed away.  On the 10th, his  remains were 
laid away in the family plot in the Masonic cemetery  under the 
auspices of the Grand Lodge of Washington.  About three  hundred Masons 
attended the ceremonies, to pay respect to his  memory.

A photograph of T.F. McElroy, presented to the Lodge by his son,  was 
ordered enlarged and given a place in the hall.

Memorial services for Brother T.M. Reed were held December 22,  1905.  
The following addresses were made: "Thomas M. Reed, the  Citizen," J.H. 
Schivley; "Our Elder Brother," R.J. Prickman;  "Thomas M. Reed, as a 
Christian," Reverend R.M. Hayes.

Olympia Lodge donated the sum of $200 from the cemetery fund for  
relief of Masonic sufferers in the San Francisco fire and  earthquake.

On December 21, 1906, Olympia Lodge tendered as a donation to the  
Grand Lodge, five acres of land of the tract owned by the Lodge  
immediately south of Olympia, for the purpose of maintaining a  Masonic 
house thereon, the land to revert when it ceased to be  used for that 
purpose.  The minutes fail to specify the use to  which the house was 
to be dedicated, though probably this  donation was proffered with a 
view to the location of a Masonic  Home, referred to later on.

The death of Past Grand Master W.H. Upton was reported January 4,  
1907, which occurred at Walla Walla.  Brother Upton was a Masonic  
scholar and a historian of national reputation.

The annual report to the Grand Lodge for 1907 showed a membership  of 
123 Master Masons.

Brother Robert Bruce Bryan died March 10, 1908.  Olympia Lodge  
officiated at the last sad rites, though Brother Bryan was a  member of 
Wynooche Lodge No. 43.  Brother Bryan was twice  Superintendent of 
Public Instruction for the State of  Washington.  His remains were 
accompanied to Montesano for  interment.

During the years of 1908 and 1909 occurred the deaths of Judge  O.V. 
Linn and William Billings.  The former Brother was Superior  Court 
Judge of Thurston County; the latter was a pioneer of  Thurston County 
and had the unprecedented record of 25 years over  consecutive service 
as sheriff.

At a suggestion by Brother Blakeslee, Brother E.L. Wolf was  appointed 
to prepare a history of Olympia Lodge No. 1.  If this  duty were ever 
performed, the present compiler would have been  delighted to have had 
access to it.

Olympia Lodge No. 1, desirous of securing the permanent location  of 
the headquarters of the Grand Lodge at Olympia, offered a deed  for a 
site on which to build a Grand Lodge home, on condition  that the 
property would revert in case of removal by the Grand  Lodge.  The 
proposition was not accepted, and the permanent  location was made at 
Zenith.

September 3, 1909, was commenced the agitation for a new Masonic  
building in Olympia, and a committee composed of Brothers  Blakeslee, 
Prickman, and Doragh was appointed to make  recommendations thereon, 
and, at a meeting on September 17, the  committee reported that the 
Scottish Rite bodies contemplated the  purchase of such portions of 
lots 1 and 2, block 18, Sylvester  Plat, as may be necessary for their 
purpose.  The committee  recommended that conveyance be authorized to 
the Scottish Rite  bodies of a tract not more than 90 feet nor less 
than 70 feet,  for the ground, not including the building, at the rate 
of $41  per front foot on Main Street, Olympia Lodge to accept bond  
secured by a mortgage on the property so conveyed together with  the 
building to be erected thereon.  This proposition was  accepted by both 
parties to the contract.

Mrs. Thomas M. Reed presented to Olympia Lodge the Masonic  library of 
her late husband, which was gratefully received.

At the meeting on May 20, 1910, the Lodge voted to sell to the  
Scottish Rite bodies the remaining 30 feet, together with the  building 
and its contents, with the exception of such relics as  Olympia No. 1 
might wish to retain, at the same rate of $41 per  front foot under the 
same terms as set forth on September 17.  Further, that after the new 
building was ready for occupancy, the  old hall should be torn down and 
disposed of by cremation.

The Lodge ordered the purchase of one thousand dollars or more of  the 
new Masonic temple bonds at 4 per cent.

The cemetery committee was authorized to expend the sum of $2100  for 
the purpose of erecting a suitable cottage for the cemetery  
superintendent and a waiting room for the public.

On December 27, 1911, Olympia Lodge No. 1, F. & A.M., held its  first 
meeting in the new temple.  The old hall of revered memory  had been 
abandoned and razed.  Many of the old members  experienced a sense of 
regret that they must accustom themselves  to a new environment, but 
this feeling was in a way relieved by  the inclusion in the new temple 
of a lodge room that still looked  familiar with its starry ceiling and 
the old familiar furniture.

The old wooden armchairs had been sold to members as keepsakes.  These 
old pieces bore the marks of the pioneer's jackknives, with  which they 
had carved, in their idle moments, the square and  compass or other 
Masonic emblems.  The seed planted in 1852 had  taken on a sturdy 
growth.  'Tis sad but nevertheless true that  things revered by time 
must give way to decay and the spirit of  progress.

At a meeting on December 4, 1914, the following brethren, old and  
faithful members, were placed on the honorary list: Nathan S. Morehead, 
M.D. Cleveland, Jacob Bolander, J.A. McKenzie, Milton  Giles, J.B. 
Elliott, H.R. Hill, George Prince, P.M. Cole, and  C.D. Springer.

The dues were reduced from $4.00 to $3.00, later rescinded.

Olympia No. 1 gave Masonic burial for Peter McKenzie, whose death  
occurred December 17 and for Alexander F. McKenzie, whose death  
occurred January 9, 1915.  Both had been long and respected  members of 
the Fraternity.

On April 16, 1915, an appropriation of $100 was made, to be  forwarded 
to the Grand Secretary to be used for the relief of  distressed brother 
Masons and their families in the war zone.

On Monday, July 5, 1915, a special communication was held to pay  the 
last sad tribute of respect to the memory of Alfred S. Ruth,  who died 
in California June 30, 1915.  Brother Ruth had been a  Past Master of 
Olympia Lodge.  He represented Thurston County in  the state senate and 
made an honorable record.  His rugged  honesty gained him universal 
respect.

Brother C.J. Lord presented to the Lodge an exposé of Masonry by  
William Morgan, printed during the year 1825.  This came into  
possession of Brother Lord's father about 1861 and was preserved  by 
him, and later by his wife until the time of her recent death.

At the time, a telegram was received from the Masonic Board of  Relief 
of San Diego, California, which stated that the widow of  Edmund 
Sylvester, who became a Mason in No. 5, U.D., Oregon  Jurisdiction, and 
who donated the property in Olympia upon which  the Masonic Temple 
stands, was resident there and destitute.  The  Lodge authorized a 
remittance for her relief.  Later a  communication was received stating 
that the daughter of Edmund  Sylvester was in the county hospital, 
stating that she could be  cared for at the rate of $1.00 per day.  A 
remittance was  forwarded and further information asked.

An ivory gavel was presented to the Lodge by Reverend R.M. Hayes,  with 
the request that it be used and not kept as a memento.  The  Worshipful 
Master accepted the gift and returned thanks to  Brother Hayes for it.

December 1, 1916, attention of the Lodge was called to the fact  that 
it had been customary for the Lodge to supply baskets of  provisions 
for the needy at Christmas time, and, to continue such  practice, a 
committee was appointed.

February 16, 1917, Olympia Lodge passed resolutions of respect  for the 
memory of Milo A. Root, whose death occurred January 19,  1917.  Judge 
Root was at one time a judge of the Supreme Court of  Washington, from 
which position he resigned.

A special communication was called for the purpose of paying the  last 
tribute of respect to the memory of Bennett M. Howell, who  died in 
Tacoma on August 14, 1917, at the age of 92 years.  Brother Howell had 
been a member of Olympia Lodge in good  standing since 1864, a period 
of 53 years.

The Lodge named a representative of this Lodge to serve on a  committee 
to look after the interests of "our brothers who are  serving, or may 
hereafter serve," in the army or navy of the  United States during the 
World War.

Robert Frost, an old and respected member of Olympia Lodge No. 1,  died 
December 16, 1917, and was accorded a Masonic funeral.

The Lodge ordered that no further patronage be given Conrad Klam, a 
local florist, on account of disloyalty and lack of patriotism.

The minutes give accounts of liberal purchases of Liberty bonds during 
the war period from time to time, in amounts varying from  $500 to 
$1000.

Thomas Prather, a pioneer, who arrived in Oregon Territory in  1852 and 
who took part as a volunteer in the Indian wars in the  Territory and 
who later served Thurston County in civil  positions, died May 18, 
1918, and was accorded Masonic rites.

September 20, 1918, the Lodge provided for bestowing life  membership 
on any member who should, in one payment at the time  of taking the 
third degree, turn into the treasury the sum of  $80, or $4.00 as dues 
each year for a period of twenty years.

Brother George R. Bigelow, at this time in France, sent to  Olympia 
Lodge a French Masonic flag he had secured in St. Nazare,  France, and 
the same was ordered cased properly for preservation.

At the request of Mt. Moriah Lodge, Olympia Lodge on November 13,  
1919, accorded funeral rites for Brother Lewis D. Shelton.  Brother 
Shelton was a charter member of Mt. Moriah Lodge and  remained an 
active member to the time of his death.  He was a  member of an old 
pioneer family, and the town of Shelton was  named for one member of 
this family.

Brother Matt C. Eugley, a member of this Lodge for many years,  died 
March 16, 1920, and was accorded a Masonic funeral.  Henry  R. Hill, 
former secretary of this Lodge, followed on the 12th of  May.

April 30, 1920, Olympia Lodge laid the corner stone for building  A of 
the state capitol group.

In January, 1922, Brother Theodore Parker assumed the office of  
secretary, a position he has held to the present time.  It is  merely 
an act of justice that he here be given credit for the  remarkable 
accuracy and neatness with which he has kept the  records of the Lodge.

On March 3, 1922, the Lodge approved a loan to the Knights  Templar of 
$1250 on condition that the loan be secured by a  promissory note 
signed by all members of the committee  representing the Commandery, as 
individuals.

April 8, the Master requested the officers of No. 1 to vacate  their 
stations, and invited Worshipful Master George A. Cooley of  Royal A. 
Gove Lodge to the chair, who appointed members of that  Lodge to fill 
the officers' chairs, whereupon Alfred A. Camant, a  Fellow Craft Mason 
of Royal A. Gove Lodge was raised to the  degree of a Master Mason.

The Lodge, in April of 1922, voted to donate the sum of $300 to the 
Olympia Y.M.C.A.

In June, the Lodge performed the last sad rites for Brother R.F.  
Sturdevant, and old and highly respected member of the  Fraternity.

Robert Doragh, whose death occurred August 27, 1922, was accorded  
Masonic burial.  Brother Doragh had been secretary of this Lodge  and 
was one of the building committee when the Masonic temple was  erected.

The Lodge passed a resolution October 20, 1922, advocating free  and 
compulsory education; taxation for support of schools in  which 
children shall be instructed in the English language only,  thus 
guaranteeing the perpetuation of our institutions and the  support of 
the constitution.

About this time several resolutions were introduced with a view  to 
regulating expenditure of Lodge funds, but like all efforts to  
regulate the weather, nothing seems to have been done about it at  this 
time.  The minutes indicate that Olympia Lodge has been  liberal in its 
support of the local Y.M.C.A., also the Children's  Home.

On August 4, 1923, it was ordered that the jewels of this Lodge  be 
draped in mourning for the period of ninety days for the death  of 
Warren G. Harding, late President of the United States.  R. Franklin 
Hart delivered an address to the Lodge, paying a  touching tribute to 
Brother Harding.

December 21, 1923, the Finance Committee, commenting on  application 
for help from several charitable institutions in the  state, reported 
that there had been collected to the general fund  during 1923 the sum 
of $2519.50, the total disbursements for the  same period had been 
$3099.33, creating a deficit of  disbursements over receipts of 
$579.83.  This overdraft was met  by drawing on the Lodge's investment 
fund for $1400.  The report  showed the Lodge had expended $859.43 for 
relief besides $175 in  donations to other organizations.  The 
committee advised that the  Lodge abandon the role of Santa Claus for 
the present, and the  report was adopted.

January 4, 1924, the Lodge adopted an amendment to the by-laws as  
follows: No donations of funds from the treasury of this Lodge  shall 
be made to any institution whatsoever except it be to an  institution 
under the sole management of a regularly constituted  Masonic body.  
Vote stood 30 to 1 for adoption.

On April 24, 1924, a special communication was called to pay the  last 
tribute of respect to Nathaniel J. Redpath.  Brother Redpath  was 
Master of No. 1 in 1902-1903, a universally beloved brother.

On November 21, 1924, the Worshipful Master stated that this  Lodge had 
the honor of being one of two Masonic Lodges of the  State of 
Washington to be selected by the Equity Washington  Masonic Bible 
Association of Chicago, to be sent the Equity  Washington Masonic 
Traveling Bible, which is being sent to two  Lodges in each state of 
the Union, upon which each Lodge is  requested to obligate a third 
degree candidate.  The Worshipful  Master stated that this Lodge would 
obligate a third degree  candidate on December 5, 1934, and brethren of 
Tenino, Camp  Lewis, Shelton, Yelm, and Harmony Lodges were invited to 
be  present.  This ceremony took place on December 5, when Clinto M. 
Williams was raised to the degree of a Master Mason.

The Lodge placed an assessment of $1.00 per year upon each  member, 
same to be placed in a special relief fund for Masons and  their 
families.  This was for 1925 only.

Olympia Lodge was subjected to a slight touch of $52.00 of Lodge  
funds, which theft occurred on April 28.

Upon motion, the Lodge authorized Brother McClintic to transport  the 
old records to his residence, there to be sorted and arranged  by him 
and returned to the Lodge.  Later on it is evident that  some 
unauthorized person has again disarranged them 

The financial condition of the Lodge on May 7, 1926, was stated  as 
follows:

General Fund			$9,477.00
Perpetual Care Fund		32,858.00
Lease Trust Fund		1,000.00


The Lodge authorized the purchase of $5,000 worth of 5% serial  gold 
notes.

W.M. Dunham of Oakville Lodge, on May 7, 1926, addressed the  Lodge on 
the subject of erecting a monument to the memory of the  extinct Grand 
Mound Lodge No. 3, and requested the Lodge to  appoint a committee to 
act with a similar committee from Oakville  and Tenino Lodges to 
formulate a plan for such purpose, and  George T. McCoy and Earle 
McCroskey were so appointed.

The tedium of searching the Lodge records is relieved by reading  of 
the troubles of Mr. and Mrs. Columbus Beary, whose appeals for  help 
appear from time to time in two volumes of records, and from  every 
section of the United States.

On December 11, 1927, Olympia Lodge No. 1 celebrated the 75th  
Anniversary of its organization, on which occasion the following  Grand 
Lodge officers were present: Grand Master Robert A. Wilson,  Deputy 
Grand Master John E. Fowler, Junior Grand Warden Roy S. Hayward, Grand 
Secretary H.W. Tyler, Grand Lecturer Charles D. Atkins, Grand Historian 
Charles M. Sherman, Past Grand Master  T.W. Holman, Past Grand Master 
George Lawler.  At the evening  meeting Grand Master Wilson delivered 
an address, followed by  Brother Roland H. Hartley.  Brother Wm. C. 
Bates, chairman of the  Board of Custodians, gave an address on the 
early history of  Masonry on the Columbia River.  George E. Blankenship 
read a  paper on the early history of Washington Masonry.  Past Master  
Frank L. Satterlee gave an interesting address entitled "Looking  
Backward."  At the close of his remarks, the Lodge room was  darkened 
and the curtains of the stage drawn aside, revealing the  replica of 
the old building mounted on a green hill surrounded by  fir and cedar 
trees.  The speaker spoke of the Tyler, who was the  first to appear 
upon the scene with his lighted lantern traveling  up the hill toward 
the hall and disappearing at the door, upon  which the lights in the 
little temple shone through the windows  into the outer darkness.  And 
then the old organ was heard in the  distance, upon which was being 
played the Masonic Dirge, all  presenting an impressive tableau most 
beautifully portrayed.

Past Grand Master Stephen J. Chadwick gave an interesting address  
entitled "Grand Masters, Past and Present, Oregon and  Washington."  
Brother F.S. Thompson delivered an address on  "Mastership Through 
Symbols."  The brethren then arose and sang  "Auld Lang Syne."     The 
proceedings of this meeting were printed in book form.

On June 3, 1928, a special communication was held for the purpose  of 
paying the last tribute of respect to the memory of Thomas J. 
McBratney, who had served as Master in 1889.

The secretary read a communication from the Thurston-Mason County  
Realty Board placing a value of $18,000 on the property of the  Lodge 
adjoining the Carlyon Addition.

Resolutions of respect for the memory of Guy C. Winstanley, who  died 
January 24, 1929, were passed by the Lodge.  Brother Charles  A. 
Briffett, received Masonic burial rites on March 6, 1929. Brother 
Robert Marr, a Past Master, was accorded Masonic rites in  March, 1929.

On May 24, 1929, a special communication was held to confer the  last 
sad rites of deceased Brother Preston M. Troy.  Brother Troy  was a 
Past Master of this Lodge.

On October 14, 1929, the Lodge performed the Masonic burial rites  for 
John J. Gilbert.  Brother Gilbert was a Past Master of No. 1  in 1886.  
He passed away at the age of 84.

Past Grand Master Tom W. Holman was made an honorary member of  this 
Lodge by unanimous vote in December, 1929.

The secretary announced that he had received from Washington. D.C., the 
Masonic paraphernalia of Captain J.J. Gilbert, whose  last wish was 
that these mementoes be sent to his old Lodge.

On April 8, a special communication was held to receive from a  
committee, composed of Brother Frank G. Blakeslee and Brother  George 
E. Blankenship, the old door of the hall, which had been  embellished 
with local Masonic history and hung in the small  Lodge room.

A very profitable discussion on the subject of the blackball was  
engaged in by Brothers Millard, Sylvester, and others.  On  careful 
consideration of the journals of this Lodge from time  immemorial to 
the present, it is evident that this is a subject  pregnant for good or 
evil.  Many a good man and good Masonic  material has been laid low by 
the blackball, and as many more  disqualified have received the 
benefits of admission.  It is a  human trait to be guided by personal 
prejudice, but a trait to be  avoided in the exercise of this most 
important function of a  Mason.  It is true that blackballing was more 
prevalent in the  olden times than now, but in contradistinction, the 
early Masons  were more censorious than in later days.

On February 6, 1931, Past Master Blakeslee presented to the Lodge  the 
trunk in which the charter of this Lodge was brought from  Portland, 
Oregon, to Olympia, a gift through the courtesy of Mrs..
 M.A. Hillburger of Chehalis and Mrs. Banner of Vader.

Past Master Blakeslee presented the Lodge with the dispensation  
granted by the Grand Lodge of Oregon Territory to Olympia Lodge  No. 5.  
The dispensation was tendered by Mrs. Carrie M. McElroy,  daughter-in-
law of Thornton F. McElroy, first Grand Master of  Washington.

The model of the old temple, completely furnished with miniature  
models of the old Lodge furniture was displayed in the Lodge room  on 
October 7, 1932.  The furniture was made by Brother Frank O. Scott; the 
wiring installed by Brother Case of this Lodge, and  the painting done 
by Brother Messegee of Harmony Lodge.  This is  indeed a perfect 
reproduction of the original, even to the  stained glass at the sides 
of the main entrance, and a piece of  the carpet from the old Lodge 
room.

The charter of the Lodge was ordered framed together with two  
photographs, one of the old temple and one of the replica of the  same.

October 6, 1933, the Lodge passed resolutions of respect to the  memory 
of Mark E. Reed.  Brother Reed was Master of this Lodge in  1892 and 
1893.  He was a son of Thomas Milburne Reed.

At a later date, Brother Walter F. Meier delivered an instructive  
address before the Lodge, tracing the genealogy of Masonry from  the 
present period to the formation of the first known Lodge in  England.  
He also spoke of the transition from operative to  speculative Masonry.  
At the same meeting Brother Meier presented  to the Lodge a traveling 
trowel for the engraving of names of all  Lodges of Washington and 
Alaska.  Olympia Lodge No. 1 was the  first Lodge to receive the 
trowel, with the request to forward  the same, after engraving it, to 
another Lodge, and so to be  passed on until the complete circuit had 
been made.

On Dec. 21, 1934, the annual election was held with the following  
result: Worshipful Master, Sy Nash; Senior Warden, Harold G. Brackett; 
Junior Warden, Maurice A. Gould; Treasurer, Fred H.
 Sylvester; Secretary, Theo. Parker; and who were duly installed  on 
Dec. 27th, a joint ceremony being conducted as usual with  Harmony 
Lodge.

Feb. 1, 1935, Past Master Millard announced that he had started  the 
traveling trowel on its long journey, by delivery of the same  to 
Steilacoom Lodge.

The journal of the Lodge with the opening the year 1935 gives  evidence 
of renewed interest as well as showing increase of  membership.

On May 17th, W.M. Sy Nash spoke regarding the establishment of a  
monument on the site of the temple in which Grand Mound Lodge No. 3 
held its meetings and at a later meeting the following resolution was 
passed, addressed to the Grand Lodge:

"Whereas, the Grand Lodge of Washington was organized in 1858 by  
Olympia No. 5 (now No. 1), Steilacoom Lodge No 8 (now No. 2),  Grand 
Mound Lodge No. 21 (afterward No. 3), and Washington Lodge  No. 22 (now 
No. 4), then working under the Grand Lodge of Oregon;  and

"Whereas, Grand Mound Lodge No. 3 surrendered its charter in  1867; and

"Whereas, It is of great historical importance to the Craft that  a 
suitable memorial be placed on the site where Grand Mound Lodge  No. 3 
once stood to commemorate its labors, its fidelity, and  untimely death 
and in order that the place may be known should  occasion ever require 
it;

"Resolved, that such a memorial be erected, at a cost of not to  exceed 
$150, to be appropriated from the funds of the Grand Lodge  and that 
the most Worshipful Grand Master be authorized and  empowered to take 
such steps as in his judgment are necessary to  effectuate the purpose 
of this resolution."

The Grand Lodge refused to take action in the matter. Notwithstanding, 
Bro. Nash is vigorously pursuing the project,  and is sanguine that the 
memorial will be placed at an early  date. The history of Olympia Lodge 
No. 1, F. & A.M., Washington  Jurisdiction, has been traced from its 
inception, when on  December 11, 1852, a small number of Masons, little 
more than  sufficient to fill the chairs, met and organized under the 
Oregon  Jurisdiction, down to 1935, a period of 83 years.  Organized  
nearly a year before the admission of Washington as a Territory,  the 
history of each has been closely interwoven during the years  of their 
existence.  The pioneer Masons laid the foundation of a  great state-
to-be.  It behooves the Masons of today to guard with  jealous care the 
proud heritage bequeathed by the sturdy forbears of Masonry.


The Grand Mound Monument

 NOTWITHSTANDING the fact that the Grand Lodge of Washington  failed, 
at its last session, to make appropriation for a suitable marker to be 
placed on the site of the meeting place of Grand  Mound Lodge No. 3, 
Worshipful Master Sy Nash, of Olympia Lodge,  is making a determined 
effort to bring the matter to a successful  culmination.

The picture on the opposite page shows graphically the plan  proposed.  
Total height above ground level 9 feet 4 inches.

Height of shaft 6 feet.  Shaft 2 feet square at bottom and 1 foot  
square at top of batter.  Polished bronze tablet 12 inches wide  and 24 
inches high.  Steps 1_ inches each way.  Base 9 feet 5½  inches square.  
Outer portion of base (1 foot 6 inches wide)  extends downward into 
ground 2 feet 6 inches for foundation.

Protection fence to be 5-16 inch galvanized chain supported by 8  
galvanized 1½ inch pipe posts set in concrete 12 inches out from  base.  
Shaft to be stone.  Under the base of the shaft concrete  is to be 
boxed out 9 inches deep by 12 inches by 14 inches to  hold a sealed 
copper box 8 by 10½ by 13 inches for the  preservation of papers.  The 
polished bronze Masonic emblem will  be about 6 inches in height.

Great credit is due Maurice A. Gould, Junior Warden of Olympia  Lodge, 
for his conception of an ideal, and for the draughting of  a plan.

The site for the proposed monument is but a short distance from  the 
Pacific highway, on Grand Mound Prairie, and in close  proximity to a 
marker placed by the Washington State Pioneers on  the site of old Fort 
Henness.

END


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