Colored Masonic Temple: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Colored Masonic Temple detail.jpg|right|thumb|325px|Detail above the entrance]]
[[Image:Colored Masonic Temple detail.jpg|right|thumb|325px|Detail above the entrance]]
[[File:Colored Masonic Temple auditorium.JPG|right|thumb|325px|Interior of the auditorium. Photo by Austin H. Stone]]
[[File:Colored Masonic Temple auditorium.JPG|right|thumb|325px|Interior of the auditorium. Photo by Austin H. Stone]]
[[File:Firehose.jpg|right|thumb|325px|Protests outisde the Colored Masonic Temple during the Birmingham Campaign, 1963. Birmingham News]]
The '''Colored Masonic Temple''' (officially the '''Masonic Temple Building''') is an 8-story Renaissance-Revival style building located at 1630 [[4th Avenue North]]. It was constructed for the [[Prince Hall Grand Lodge|Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Free & Accepted Masons of Alabama]] and is a contributing structure to the [[4th Avenue Historic District]]. The building was developed under the leadership of Grand Master [[Walter Woods]] and the $657,704 cost was funded entirely by contributions, without taking on any construction debt.
The '''Colored Masonic Temple''' (officially the '''Masonic Temple Building''') is an 8-story Renaissance-Revival style building located at 1630 [[4th Avenue North]]. It was constructed for the [[Prince Hall Grand Lodge|Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Free & Accepted Masons of Alabama]] and is a contributing structure to the [[4th Avenue Historic District]]. The building was developed under the leadership of Grand Master [[Walter Woods]] and the $657,704 cost was funded entirely by contributions, without taking on any construction debt.


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==Tenants==
==Tenants==
* lobby: [[Stagg Billiard Parlour]], [[Ford & Campbell Jeweler]] (1941), [[Lillie Robinson]] florist (1941),  
* basement: [[Temple Bowling Center for Colored People]] bowling lanes (1941)
** [[Stagg Billiard Parlor]]
** [[Knick Knack Bar]]
** [[Forniss Printing Company]]
** [[Good Deal News Distribution Company]]
* lobby: [[Ford & Campbell Jeweler]] (1941), [[Lillie Robinson]] florist (1941),  
* ground floor: [[Booker T. Washington Library]] (1924-1956)
* ground floor: [[Booker T. Washington Library]] (1924-1956)
** [[Birmingham Plumbing Company]] (1926)
** [[Your Flower Shop]] florist (2000's)
** [[Simp's Barber and Style Shop]] men's barber shop (2000's)
** [[John's Alterations and Repair]] (2000's)
** [[Esquire's Shoe Shine and Repairs]] cobbler (2000's)
** [[Temple Pharmacy]] (1940's)
* 2nd floor: Masonic Auditorium
* 2nd floor: Masonic Auditorium
* 3rd floor
* 3rd floor
** 301-303: [[Ferdinand Bradford]], physician (1941)
** 301-303: [[Ferdinand Bradford]], physician (1941)
** 304-307: [[Jefferson County Colored Schools]] (1941)
** 304-307: [[Jefferson County Colored Schools]] (1941)
** [[Jackson's Dental Lab]] dental prosthetic laboratory
** [[Mercedes Entertainment]]
* 4th floor
* 4th floor
** 401-403: [[Eugene Elliott]] dentist & [[Charles McPherson]] physician (1941)
** 401-403: [[Eugene Elliott]] dentist & [[Charles McPherson]] physician (1941)
** 404: [[American Federation of Musicians Local 733]] (1941)
** 404: [[American Federation of Musicians Local 733]] (1941)
** 405-408: [[Dr. L.U. Goin]] physician and Grand Medical Registrar (1926)
** 405: [[Mattie Moreland]] dressmaker (1941)
** 405: [[Mattie Moreland]] dressmaker (1941)
** 407-408: [[John J. Thompson]] dentist (1941)
** 407-408: [[John J. Thompson]] dentist (1941)
** 431: [[Masonic Library Supplies and Masonic Church Supplies]]
** [[Birmingham Housing Authority]] Offices of Benjamin Greene
** [[NAACP]] meeting halls
** Masonic meeting halls
* 5th floor
* 5th floor
** 501-504: [[Marion McCall]] & [[Samuel Harris]] physicians (1941)
** 501-504: [[Marion McCall]] & [[Samuel Harris]] physicians (1941)
** 503: [[Colored Fair Association]] (1928)
** 505-506: [[Herman Clayborne]] dentist (1941)
** 505-506: [[Herman Clayborne]] dentist (1941)
** 507-508: [[John Hutchinson]] physician (1941)
** 507-508: [[John Hutchinson]] physician (1941)
** 510-512: [[Arthur Shores]] attorney & [[Hollins & Shores]] real estate (1941)
** 510-512: [[Arthur Shores]] attorney & [[Hollins & Shores]] real estate (1941)
** 523-528: ''[[Birmingham Reporter]]'' newspaper (1930–1932)
** 523-528: ''[[Birmingham Reporter]]'' newspaper (1930–1932)
** 525-527: [[American Cross Chemical Company]] (1926)
** 525: [[Stauffer Colored Salon]] beauty shop (1940's)
** 529-530: [[Cooperative Life & Hospital Insurance Co.]] (1941)
** 529-530: [[Cooperative Life & Hospital Insurance Co.]] (1941)
* 6th floor
* 6th floor [[File: Trunk.JPG|right|thumb|325px|Trunk belonging to Geometry Lodge No. 410 in a meeting hall. Photo by Austin H. Stone.]]
** 601-606: [[Atlanta Life Insurance Co.]] (1941)
** 601-606: [[Atlanta Life Insurance Co.]] (1941)
** 607-612: [[Pilgrim Health & Life Insurance Co.]] (1941)
** 607-612: [[Pilgrim Health & Life Insurance Co.]] (1941)

Revision as of 06:15, 7 July 2022

View of the Colored Masonic Temple
Detail above the entrance
Interior of the auditorium. Photo by Austin H. Stone
Protests outisde the Colored Masonic Temple during the Birmingham Campaign, 1963. Birmingham News

The Colored Masonic Temple (officially the Masonic Temple Building) is an 8-story Renaissance-Revival style building located at 1630 4th Avenue North. It was constructed for the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Free & Accepted Masons of Alabama and is a contributing structure to the 4th Avenue Historic District. The building was developed under the leadership of Grand Master Walter Woods and the $657,704 cost was funded entirely by contributions, without taking on any construction debt.

The brick building was designed by the firm of Taylor & Persley (Robert Robinson Taylor and Louis Hudson Persley), and built by Windham Brothers Construction. The cornerstone was laid in 1922 and the building opened in 1924. Its design features an engaged limestone temple front on the south facade. The architrave and frieze of the Corinthian entablature was segmented to make room for the fourth-floor windows. The dentil cornice is continuous, and wraps two sides of the building, dividing the upper and lower sections. The upper part of the facade is gridded off into two and 1 1/2-story sections, separated by pilasters and smaller entablatures.

Throughout its history the building has housed the offices of notable African-American professionals, businesses and organizations, and a popular drug store and soda fountain on the ground floor. Its auditorium, with a capacity of 2,000, was used for meetings, ceremonies, concerts, dances, cotillions, mass meetings and other special events. The Duke Ellington Orchestra and Count Basie's big bands played regularly in the Temple ballroom.

In October 1932 the auditorium hosted an All-Southern Scottsboro and Civil Rights Conference organized by the Communist Party-affiliated International Labor Defense. Speakers included Donald and Alice Burke, Mary Leonard and Ben Fowler. Most of the hundreds of people who came to participate were turned away by a police intimidation.

Three ground floor rooms were used for the Booker T. Washington Library, the first public lending library open to Black citizens in Birmingham. The offices of the NAACP, in this building, were padlocked following the May 26, 1956 order by Montgomery Circuit Judge Walter Jones banning the organization from operating in the state of Alabama.

It is still used for meetings of the the Prince Hall Grand Lodge, but is otherwise underutilized.

Redevelopment proposals

In January 2009 Main Street Birmingham hosted a workshop at the building to generate ideas for creative redevelopment. A campaign to raise $10-15 million for restoration and expansion of the Temple Building was launched by the Grand Lodge in 2017, shortly after it was made part of the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument. Schemes for possible expansion discussed at the time included a multi-story parking deck to the west of the Temple with retail spaces on the ground floor.

In November 2019 The Lodge announced that it was working with Historic District Developers (a venture of Henderson & Co. of Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina with Direct Invest Development LLC of New York) on a $29 million mixed-use redevelopment of the building. Urban Impact Inc. and the Birmingham Department of Innovation and Economic Opportunity also participated in the project, which was intended to qualify for Historic Preservation Tax Credits, New Market Tax Credits, and Opportunity Zone tax credits.

Plans for the building include incubator retail, maker-space and office space. The project's design phase continued into 2022, with the start of construction planned for late that year.

Tenants

References

  • Polk's Birmingham (Jefferson County, Ala.) City Directory, including Fairfield and Homewood (1941) Richmond, Virginia: R. L. Polk & Co.
  • Ruisi, Anne (January 12, 2009) "Masonic Temple in downtown Birmingham draws preservationists." The Birmingham News
  • Weiss, Ellen (2012) "Robert R. Taylor and Tuskegee: An African-American Architect Designs for Booker T. Washington." Montgomery: New South Books ISBN 1588382486
  • Edgemon, Erin (February 26, 2017) "Historic civil rights landmark launches fundraising campaign." The Birmingham News
  • Van der Bijl, Hanno (November 20, 2019) "Developer eyes mixed-use project at Masonic Temple in city center." Birmingham Business Journal
  • Watson, Nathan (February 14, 2022) "$29M renovation underway for Masonic Temple Building." Bham Now

External links